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Montelukast or salmeterol combined with an inhaled steroid in adult asthma: design and rationale of a randomized, double-blind comparative study (the IMPACT Investigation of Montelukast as a Partner Agent for Complementary Therapy-trial)

Montelukast or salmeterol combined with an inhaled steroid in adult asthma: design and rationale of a randomized, double-blind comparative study (the IMPACT Investigation of Montelukast as a Partner Agent for Complementary Therapy-trial)
Montelukast or salmeterol combined with an inhaled steroid in adult asthma: design and rationale of a randomized, double-blind comparative study (the IMPACT Investigation of Montelukast as a Partner Agent for Complementary Therapy-trial)
Asthma patients who continue to experience symptoms despite taking regular inhaled corticosteroids represent a management challenge. Leukotrienes play a key role in asthma pathophysiology, and since pro-inflammatory leukotrienes are poorly suppressed by corticosteroids it seems rational to add a leukotriene receptor antagonist (LTRA) when a low to moderate dose of inhaled corticosteroids does not provide sufficient disease control. Long acting beta2-agonist (LABA) treatment represents an alternative to LTRAs and both treatment modalities have been shown to provide additional disease control when added to corticosteroid treatment. To compare the relative clinical benefits of adding either a LTRA or a LABA to asthma patients inadequately controlled by inhaled corticosteroids, a randomized, double-blind, multi-centre, 48-week study will be initiated at approximately 120 centres throughout Europe, Latin America, Middle East, Africa and the Asia-Pacific region in early 2000.
The study will compare the oral LTRA montelukast with the inhaled LABA salmeterol, each administered on a background of inhaled fluticasone, on asthma attacks, quality of life, lung function, eosinophil levels, healthcare utilization, and safety, in approximately 1200 adult asthmatic patients. The requirements for study enrollment include a history of asthma, FEV1 or PEFR values between 50% and 90% of the predicted value together with > or = 12% improvement in FEV1 after beta-agonist administration, a minimum pre-determined level of asthma symptoms and daily beta-agonist medication. The study will include a 4-week run-in period, during which patients previously taking inhaled corticosteroids are switched to open-label fluticasone (200 microg daily), followed by a 48-week double-blind, treatment period in which patients continuing to experience abnormal pulmonary function and daytime symptoms are randomized to receive montelukast (10 mg once daily) and salmeterol placebo, or inhaled salmeterol (100 microg daily) and montelukast placebo. All patients will continue with inhaled fluticasone (200 microg daily). During the study, asthma attacks, overnight asthma symptoms, and morning peak expiratory flow rate will be assessed using patient diary cards; quality of life will also be assessed using an asthma-specific quality-of life questionnaire. The results of this study are expected to provide physicians with important clinical evidence to help them make a rational and logical treatment choice for asthmatic patients experiencing breakthrough symptoms on inhaled corticosteroids.
leukotriene receptor antagonists, montelukast, singulair, inhaled steroids, fluticasone, long-acting ? -agonists, salmeterol, asthma, airway inflammation
612-621
Bjermer, L.
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Bisgaard, H.
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Bousquet, J.
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Fabbri, L.M.
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Greening, A.
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Haahtela, T.
bdabf900-6537-4a9c-967f-d34cf54eaf67
Holgate, S.T.
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Picado, C.
a86b3b7b-42ff-48c5-b2d2-b45d57cbe345
Leff, J.A.
22abd662-fbc2-4cef-98ce-addd4c60a63e
Bjermer, L.
5e4be066-ed75-4f31-9e28-dc502cc7c0a4
Bisgaard, H.
a25617dd-eacd-4967-9c2b-5519d38d83cb
Bousquet, J.
fda25127-be6f-45cd-a455-883cc90d8e0e
Fabbri, L.M.
bcd21e7a-25ed-458d-8cbf-500e45b79a1f
Greening, A.
92802c23-169a-42e8-a611-695f959f8ac8
Haahtela, T.
bdabf900-6537-4a9c-967f-d34cf54eaf67
Holgate, S.T.
2e7c17a9-6796-436e-8772-1fe6d2ac5edc
Picado, C.
a86b3b7b-42ff-48c5-b2d2-b45d57cbe345
Leff, J.A.
22abd662-fbc2-4cef-98ce-addd4c60a63e

Bjermer, L., Bisgaard, H., Bousquet, J., Fabbri, L.M., Greening, A., Haahtela, T., Holgate, S.T., Picado, C. and Leff, J.A. (2000) Montelukast or salmeterol combined with an inhaled steroid in adult asthma: design and rationale of a randomized, double-blind comparative study (the IMPACT Investigation of Montelukast as a Partner Agent for Complementary Therapy-trial). Respiratory Medicine, 94 (6), 612-621. (doi:10.1053/rmed.2000.0806).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Asthma patients who continue to experience symptoms despite taking regular inhaled corticosteroids represent a management challenge. Leukotrienes play a key role in asthma pathophysiology, and since pro-inflammatory leukotrienes are poorly suppressed by corticosteroids it seems rational to add a leukotriene receptor antagonist (LTRA) when a low to moderate dose of inhaled corticosteroids does not provide sufficient disease control. Long acting beta2-agonist (LABA) treatment represents an alternative to LTRAs and both treatment modalities have been shown to provide additional disease control when added to corticosteroid treatment. To compare the relative clinical benefits of adding either a LTRA or a LABA to asthma patients inadequately controlled by inhaled corticosteroids, a randomized, double-blind, multi-centre, 48-week study will be initiated at approximately 120 centres throughout Europe, Latin America, Middle East, Africa and the Asia-Pacific region in early 2000.
The study will compare the oral LTRA montelukast with the inhaled LABA salmeterol, each administered on a background of inhaled fluticasone, on asthma attacks, quality of life, lung function, eosinophil levels, healthcare utilization, and safety, in approximately 1200 adult asthmatic patients. The requirements for study enrollment include a history of asthma, FEV1 or PEFR values between 50% and 90% of the predicted value together with > or = 12% improvement in FEV1 after beta-agonist administration, a minimum pre-determined level of asthma symptoms and daily beta-agonist medication. The study will include a 4-week run-in period, during which patients previously taking inhaled corticosteroids are switched to open-label fluticasone (200 microg daily), followed by a 48-week double-blind, treatment period in which patients continuing to experience abnormal pulmonary function and daytime symptoms are randomized to receive montelukast (10 mg once daily) and salmeterol placebo, or inhaled salmeterol (100 microg daily) and montelukast placebo. All patients will continue with inhaled fluticasone (200 microg daily). During the study, asthma attacks, overnight asthma symptoms, and morning peak expiratory flow rate will be assessed using patient diary cards; quality of life will also be assessed using an asthma-specific quality-of life questionnaire. The results of this study are expected to provide physicians with important clinical evidence to help them make a rational and logical treatment choice for asthmatic patients experiencing breakthrough symptoms on inhaled corticosteroids.

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Published date: 2000
Keywords: leukotriene receptor antagonists, montelukast, singulair, inhaled steroids, fluticasone, long-acting ? -agonists, salmeterol, asthma, airway inflammation

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Local EPrints ID: 26943
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/26943
PURE UUID: 2f8f7aa7-1418-44c7-8915-a0792247be1f

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Date deposited: 26 Apr 2006
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 07:14

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Contributors

Author: L. Bjermer
Author: H. Bisgaard
Author: J. Bousquet
Author: L.M. Fabbri
Author: A. Greening
Author: T. Haahtela
Author: S.T. Holgate
Author: C. Picado
Author: J.A. Leff

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