Abstract

The amount of drug depositing in the airways depends, among others, on the inhalation manoeuvre and breathing parameters. The objective of this study was to quantify the effect of lung emptying before the inhalation of drugs on the lung doses. Thirty healthy adults were recruited. Their breathing profiles were recorded while inhaling through six different emptied DPI devices without breathe-out and after comfortable or forced exhalation. The corresponding emitted doses and aerosol size distributions were derived from the literature. The Stochastic Lung Model was used to estimate the deposited doses. In general, forceful exhalation caused increased flow rate and inhaled air volume. Increased flow rate led to the increase of the average lung dose for drugs with positive lung dose-flow rate correlation (e.g. Symbicort®: relative increase of 6.7%, Bufomix®: relative increase of 9.2%). For drugs with negative correlation of lung dose with flow rate (all the studied drugs except the above two) lung emptying caused increased (Foster® by 2.7%), almost unchanged (Seebri®, Relvar®, Bretaris®) and also decreased (Onbrez® by 6.6%) average lung dose. It is worth noting that there were significant inter-individual differences, and lung dose of each drug could be increased by a number of subjects. In conclusion, the change of lung dose depends on the degree of lung emptying, but it is also inhaler and drug specific. Forceful exhalation can help in increasing the lung dose only if the above specificities are taken into account.

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