Safety of tiotropium Respimat® in black or African-American patients with symptomatic asthma
Black patients with asthma have a higher disease burden and greater morbidity compared with other racial/ethnic groups. Tiotropium Respimat®, as add-on to at least inhaled corticosteroids (ICS), improves lung function and asthma control and reduces asthma exacerbation risk in patients, with a safety...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Respiratory medicine 2019-08, Vol.155, p.58-60 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Black patients with asthma have a higher disease burden and greater morbidity compared with other racial/ethnic groups. Tiotropium Respimat®, as add-on to at least inhaled corticosteroids (ICS), improves lung function and asthma control and reduces asthma exacerbation risk in patients, with a safety profile comparable with placebo. This study aimed to assess the safety of tiotropium Respimat®, compared with placebo, in black or African-American patients.
Data were pooled from 12 randomized, placebo-controlled, parallel-group, Phase II or III trials from the global Boehringer Ingelheim program with once-daily tiotropium Respimat® (5 μg or 2.5 μg). Trial participants had symptomatic persistent asthma with a broad range of severities and were aged 1–75 years. The safety results of black or African-American patients were compared with the overall trial population.
Of the 5165 patients treated with tiotropium or placebo, 3.2% were black or African American. For both doses of tiotropium, the proportion of patients reporting adverse events (AEs) was approximately 10% lower compared with placebo and was generally comparable with the proportion of patients reporting AEs in all groups of the overall population. The number of investigator-assessed drug-related AEs, AEs leading to trial drug discontinuation or serious AEs reported by patients was low and comparable between treatment groups and with the overall population.
Tiotropium Respimat® appears to be a generally safe add-on bronchodilator treatment option to ICS with or without other controllers in pediatric and adult black or African-American patients with asthma.
NCT01634113, NCT01634139, NCT01634152, NCT01257230, NCT01277523, NCT01316380, NCT00350207, NCT01172808, NCT01172821, NCT01340209, NCT00772538, NCT00776984.
•Tiotropium appears to be a safe add-on therapy for black patients with asthma.•The proportion reporting adverse events was similar to the overall population.•The placebo-controlled study included all age ranges and asthma severities. |
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ISSN: | 0954-6111 1532-3064 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.rmed.2019.07.002 |