首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
     


The severity of airways obstruction as a determinant of treatment response in COPD
Authors:Peter MA Calverley  Romain A Pauwels  Paul W Jones  Julie A Anderson  J?rgen Vestbo
Affiliation:1 Clinical Research Centre, University Hospital Aintree, Liverpool, UK;2 Department of Pulmonary Disease, University Hospital, Ghent, Belgium;3 Department of Physiological Medicine, St George’s Hospital, London, UK;4 Biomedical Data Sciences, GlaxoSmithKline Research and Development, Greenford, UK;5 North West Lung Centre, Wythenshawe Hospital, Manchester, UK
Abstract:Guidelines recommend that patients with COPD are stratified arbitrarily by baseline severity (FEV1) to decide when to initiate combination treatment with a long-acting β2-agonist and an inhaled corticosteroid. Assessment of baseline FEV1 as a continuous variable may provide a more reliable prediction of treatment effects. Patients from a 1-year, parallel-group, randomized controlled trial comparing 50 μg salmeterol (Sal), 500 μg fluticasone propionate (FP), the combination (Sal/FP) and placebo, (bid), were categorized post hoc into FEV1 <50% and FEV1 ≥50% predicted subgroups (n=949/513 respectively). Treatment effects on clinical outcomes – lung function, exacerbations, health status, diary card symptoms, and adverse events – were investigated. Treatment responses based on a pre-specified analysis explored treatment differences by severity as a continuous variable. Lung function improved with active treatment irrespective of FEV1; Sal/FP had greatest effect. This improvement appeared additive in milder disease; synergistic in severe disease. Active therapy significantly reduced exacerbation rate in patients with FEV1 <50% predicted, not in milder disease. Health status and breathlessness improved with Sal/FP irrespective of baseline FEV1; adverse events were similar across subgroups. The spirometric response to Sal/FP varied with baseline FEV1, and clinical benefits were not restricted to patients with severe disease. These data have implications for COPD management decisions, suggesting that arbitrary stratifications of baseline severity are not necessarily indicative of treatment efficacy and that the benefits of assessing baseline severity as a continuous variable should be assessed in future trials.
Keywords:chronic obstructive pulmonary disease   FEV1   inhaled corticosteroid   long-acting β2-agonist   subgroups
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号