npj Primary Care Respiratory Medicine (May 2017)

Beta-agonist overuse and delay in obtaining medical review in high risk asthma: a secondary analysis of data from a randomised controlled trial

  • Janine Pilcher,
  • Mitesh Patel,
  • Alison Pritchard,
  • Darmiga Thayabaran,
  • Stefan Ebmeier,
  • Dominick Shaw,
  • Peter Black,
  • Irene Braithwaite,
  • Mark Weatherall,
  • Richard Beasley

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41533-017-0032-z
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 27, no. 1
pp. 1 – 8

Abstract

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Reliever inhaler overuse and delay in medical review in asthma In asthma, overuse of beta-agonist reliever medication and delay in seeking medical review in an exacerbation are linked to asthma deaths. Janine Pilcher at the Medical Research Institute of New Zealand, and co-workers, conducted a review of data from a study of 303 adult patients with severe asthma, followed over 24 weeks. The patients were allocated to either a budesonide/formoterol, or a salbutamol inhaler to take for symptom relief, in addition to their maintenance treatment. Inhalers were fitted with electronic monitors, to accurately document every use. In both groups, on 90% of days when an exacerbation requiring excess use of an inhaler occurred, patients did not follow-up with medical professionals within 48 h as advised. Further, in both groups, ‘extreme’ reliever inhaler use was recorded at least once in around one in four patients.