Among adults with
asthma1 controlled with low-dose
inhaled2 corticosteroid(皮质类固醇) therapy, the time to treatment failure was not significantly different among patients who received corticosteroid dose adjustment based on physician
assessment3, a biomarker, or symptom occurrence, according to a study in the September 12 issue of JAMA. Asthma disease activity varies daily,
seasonally4, and episodically, presumably related to
airway5 inflammation. "Accordingly, asthma management requires periodic dose adjustments of controller medications, particularly inhaled corticosteroids. Adjustments have been based on physician assessment of symptoms, activity limitation, rescue albuterol use (a
bronchodilator支气管扩张剂 used for treating asthma), lung function, and exacerbations at usual office or clinic visits, a biomarker of disease activity (e.g.,
exhaled7 nitric
oxide8), or the occurrence of symptoms on a day-to-day basis," according to background information in the article. "No
consensus9 exists for adjusting inhaled corticosteroid therapy in patients with asthma."
William J. Calhoun, M.D., of the University of Texas Medical Branch, Galveston, and colleagues hypothesized that adjustment of inhaled corticosteroids based on symptoms or measurement of exhaled nitric oxide would be superior to adjustment based on physician assessment. The researchers conducted a randomized, placebo-controlled trial that included 342 adults with mild to moderate asthma controlled by low-dose inhaled corticosteroid therapy (n = 114 assigned to physician assessment-based adjustment [101 completed], n = 115 to biomarker-based [exhaled nitric oxide] adjustment [92 completed], and n = 113 to symptom-based adjustment [97 completed]). The Best Adjustment Strategy for Asthma in the Long Term (BASALT) trial was conducted by the Asthma Clinical Research Network at 10 academic medical centers in the United States for 9 months between June 2007 and July 2010. For physician assessment-based adjustment and biomarker-based adjustment, the dose of inhaled corticosteroids was adjusted every 6 weeks; for symptom-based adjustment, inhaled corticosteroids were taken with each albuterol(沙丁胺醇) rescue use.
The researchers found that the time to treatment failure, the primary study outcome, did not differ significantly among the 3 treatment strategies. The 9-month Kaplan-Meier failure rates were 22 percent (24 events) for physician assessment-based adjustment (PABA), 20 percent (21 events) for biomarker-based adjustment (BBA), and 15 percent (16 events) for symptom-based adjustment (SBA).
Treatment failure rates were not different among groups when multiple episodes of treatment failure were included. There were not significant differences among the treatment groups for asthma
exacerbation6(恶化,激怒) (including multiple episodes) rates; and the average proportion of treatment failures that progressed to exacerbations. The authors also found that measures of lung function and asthma symptoms were not significantly different among the groups.
"In summary, among adult participants with mild to moderate
persistent10 asthma, neither the SBA nor the BBA strategy for inhaled corticosteroid therapy was superior to the standard PABA strategy for the outcome of treatment failure."