Use of beclomethasone dipropionate as rescue treatment for children with mild persistent asthma (TREXA): a randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial

Summary Background Daily inhaled corticosteroids are an effective treatment for mild persistent asthma, but some children have exacerbations even with good day-to-day control, and many discontinue treatment after becoming asymptomatic. We assessed the effectiveness of an inhaled corticosteroid (becl...

Ausführliche Beschreibung

Gespeichert in:
Bibliographische Detailangaben
Veröffentlicht in:The Lancet (British edition) 2011-02, Vol.377 (9766), p.650-657
Hauptverfasser: Martinez, Fernando D, Prof, Chinchilli, Vernon M, Prof, Morgan, Wayne J, Prof, Boehmer, Susan J, MA, Lemanske, Robert F, Prof, Mauger, David T, Prof, Strunk, Robert C, Prof, Szefler, Stanley J, Prof, Zeiger, Robert S, Prof, Bacharier, Leonard B, MD, Bade, Elizabeth, MD, Covar, Ronina A, MD, Friedman, Noah J, MD, Guilbert, Theresa W, MD, Heidarian-Raissy, Hengameh, PharmD, Kelly, H William, Prof, Malka-Rais, Jonathan, MD, Mellon, Michael H, MD, Sorkness, Christine A, Prof, Taussig, Lynn, Prof
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
Schlagworte:
Online-Zugang:Volltext
Tags: Tag hinzufügen
Keine Tags, Fügen Sie den ersten Tag hinzu!
Beschreibung
Zusammenfassung:Summary Background Daily inhaled corticosteroids are an effective treatment for mild persistent asthma, but some children have exacerbations even with good day-to-day control, and many discontinue treatment after becoming asymptomatic. We assessed the effectiveness of an inhaled corticosteroid (beclomethasone dipropionate) used as rescue treatment. Methods In this 44-week, randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial we enrolled children and adolescents with mild persistent asthma aged 5–18 years from five clinical centres in the USA. A computer-generated randomisation sequence, stratified by clinical centre and age group, was used to randomly assign participants to one of four treatment groups: twice daily beclomethasone with beclomethasone plus albuterol as rescue (combined group); twice daily beclomethasone with placebo plus albuterol as rescue (daily beclomethasone group); twice daily placebo with beclomethasone plus albuterol as rescue (rescue beclomethasone group); and twice daily placebo with placebo plus albuterol as rescue (placebo group). Twice daily beclomethasone treatment was one puff of beclomethasone (40 μg per puff) or placebo given in the morning and evening. Rescue beclomethasone treatment was two puffs of beclomethasone or placebo for each two puffs of albuterol (180 μg) needed for symptom relief. The primary outcome was time to first exacerbation that required oral corticosteroids. A secondary outcome measured linear growth. Analysis was by intention to treat. This study is registered with clinicaltrials.gov , number NCT00394329. Results 843 children and adolescents were enrolled into this trial, of whom 288 were assigned to one of four treatment groups; combined (n=71), daily beclomethasone (n=72), rescue beclomethasone (n=71), and placebo (n=74)—555 individuals were excluded during the run-in, according to predefined criteria. Compared with the placebo group (49%, 95% CI 37–61), the frequency of exacerbations was lower in the daily (28%, 18–40, p=0·03), combined (31%, 21–43, p=0·07), and rescue (35%, 24–47, p=0·07) groups. Frequency of treatment failure was 23% (95% CI 14–43) in the placebo group, compared with 5·6% (1·6–14) in the combined (p=0·012), 2·8% (0–10) in the daily (p=0·009), and 8·5% (2–15) in the rescue (p=0·024) groups. Compared with the placebo group, linear growth was 1·1 cm (SD 0·3) less in the combined and daily arms (p
ISSN:0140-6736
1474-547X
DOI:10.1016/S0140-6736(10)62145-9