Journal of Asthma and Allergy (Jun 2013)

Extrafine inhaled corticosteroid therapy in the control of asthma

  • Ivancsó I,
  • Böcskei R,
  • Müller V,
  • Tamási L

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2013, no. default
pp. 69 – 80

Abstract

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István Ivancsó, Renáta Böcskei, Veronika Müller, Lilla Tamási Department of Pulmonology, Semmelweis University, Budapest, Hungary Abstract: Small airways disease plays an important role in the pathogenesis of asthma, but assessment of small airways impairment is not easy in everyday clinical practice. The small airways can be examined by several invasive and noninvasive methods, most of which can at present be used only in the experimental setting. Inhalers providing extrafine inhaled corticosteroid particle sizes may achieve sufficient deposition in the peripheral airways. Many studies have reported the beneficial effects of extrafine inhaled corticosteroids on inflammation, ie, on dysfunction in both the central and distal airways in asthmatics, and there are some data on asthma phenotypes in which the small airways seem to be affected more than in other phenotypes, including nocturnal asthma, severe steroid-dependent or difficult-to-treat asthma, asthma complicated by smoking, elderly asthmatic patients and/or patients with fixed airflow obstruction, and asthmatic children. The relevant randomized controlled clinical trials indicate that the efficacy of extrafine and nonextrafine inhaled corticosteroid formulations is similar in terms of primary endpoints, but there are certain clinically important endpoints for which the extrafine formulations show additional benefits. Keywords: small airways, inflammation, dysfunction, noninvasive evaluation methods, peripheral deposition