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Device Mixing in Asthma, a General Practice Research Database Study (EBsalbutamol)

R

Research in Real-Life

Status

Completed

Conditions

Asthma

Treatments

Drug: Initiation of beclometasone via the Easibreathe device plus salbutamol via and MDI device
Drug: Increase of beclometasone via the Easibreathe device plus salbutamol via an MDI
Drug: Initiation of beclometasone via the Easibreathe device plus salbutamol via the Easibreathe device
Drug: Increase of beclometasone via the Easibreathe device plus salbutamol via the Easibreathe device

Study type

Observational

Funder types

NETWORK
Industry

Identifiers

Details and patient eligibility

About

This study will compare the absolute and relative effectiveness of asthma management in patients on inhaled corticosteroid (ICS) maintenance therapy as Easi-breathe® (EB) - beclometasone dipropionate (BDP) breath-actuated inhaler (BAI) - and as-needed (prn) reliever medication (short-acting beta2-agonist [SABA] therapy) via either a BAI (i.e. Easi-breathe® [EB] salbutamol) or via a pressurised metered dose inhaler (MDI) (e.g. MDI salbutamol).

Full description

Current asthma guidelines in the UK are underpinned by evidence derived from randomised controlled trials (RCTs). Although RCT data are considered the gold standard, patients recruited to asthma RCTs are estimated to represent less than 10% of the UK's asthma population. The poor representation of the asthma population is due to a number of factors, such as tightly-controlled inclusion criteria for RCTs. There is, therefore, a need for more representative RCTs and real-life observational studies to inform existing guidelines and help optimise asthma outcomes.

Inhalation therapy is the cornerstone of asthma treatment, used for the delivery of 'reliever' bronchodilator therapy (e.g. salbutamol) as well as anti-inflammatory corticosteroid 'maintenance' or 'controller' therapy. Currently available inhaler devices include MDIs, breath-actuated MDIs (BAIs), and dry powder inhalers (DPIs). Both BAIs and DPIs are actuated by the patient's inhalation manoeuvre, while MDIs are actuated by the patient's pressing of a button, which must thus be coordinated with inhalation. The clinical effectiveness of inhalation therapy derives from delivery of drug to the target sites in the lungs, and evidence is mounting that suboptimal use of inhaler devices is a common problem contributing to compromised asthma control for many patients. Indeed, decreased asthma control has been linked to the number of mistakes when using MDIs for delivering inhaled corticosteroids (ICS).

There is also evidence that the ability of patients to use the different inhaler device types is variable. Nonetheless, recent reviews of RCTs, while recognising the importance of inhaler technique, have concluded that inhaler devices do not differ significantly in efficacy and that the cheapest inhaler device should be used. However, as results are based on RCTs they should be applied with care in light of the aforementioned issues around external validity of RCTs and the ability to extrapolate their findings across a broad patient population. Moreover, patients enrolled in RCTs typically receive extensive training and must demonstrate and maintain proper inhaler technique, seldom accomplished in a real-world setting.

The aim of this study is to compare the absolute and relative effectiveness of ICS (maintenance) plus SABA (reliever) therapy delivered via same-type devices (namely BDP via EB plus salbutamol via EB [BAI]) and that delivered via different device types (i.e. BDP via EB [BAI] plus SABA via MDI) in a real-life, representative, UK primary care asthma population.

Enrollment

815,377 patients

Sex

All

Ages

4 to 80 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Aged: 4-80 years:

    • Paediatric cohort (aged 4-11 years), and
    • Adult cohort (aged 12-80 years )
  • Evidence of asthma:

    • a diagnostic code for asthma, and / or
    • ≥2 prescriptions for asthma at different points in time during the prior year and/ or
    • ≥2 prescriptions for asthma therapies during the outcome year, including ≥1 ICS prescription (in addition to that received at IPD) - IPDI cohort only
  • Be on current asthma therapy (for the IPDA cohort only):

    • ≥1 ICS prescription in the prior year, and
    • ≥1 other asthma prescription during the baseline year.
  • Have at least one year of up-to-standard (UTS) baseline data (prior to the IPD) and at least one year of UTS outcome data (following the IPD).

Exclusion criteria

  • had a COPD read code at any time; and/or
  • received a combination inhaler in addition to a separate ICS inhaler in the baseline year; and/or
  • received a long-acting beta2-agonsist (LABA) in addition to a separate ICS inhaler in the baseline year
  • received ICS therapy during baseline year via DPI (in IPDA cohort only).

Trial design

815,377 participants in 4 patient groups

IPDA salbutamol MDI
Description:
receive a recorded increase in ICS therapy as BDP Easibreathe at the index date and also receive salbutamol MDI
Treatment:
Drug: Increase of beclometasone via the Easibreathe device plus salbutamol via an MDI
IPDA salbutamol EB
Description:
receive a recorded increase in ICS therapy as BDP Easibreathe at the index date and also receive salbutamol Easibreathe
Treatment:
Drug: Increase of beclometasone via the Easibreathe device plus salbutamol via the Easibreathe device
IPDI salbutamol EB
Description:
initiate ICS therapy as BDP Easibreathe at the index date and also receive salbutamol Easibreathe
Treatment:
Drug: Initiation of beclometasone via the Easibreathe device plus salbutamol via the Easibreathe device
IPDI salbutamol MDI
Description:
initiate ICS therapy as BDP Easibreathe at the index date and also receive salbutamol MDI
Treatment:
Drug: Initiation of beclometasone via the Easibreathe device plus salbutamol via and MDI device

Trial contacts and locations

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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