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Effects of 22 Months of Treatment with Inhaled Corticosteroids and/or Beta-2-Agonists on Lung Function, Airway Responsiveness, and Symptoms in Children with Asthma

459

Citations

23

References

1992

Year

Abstract

In a randomized double-blind multicenter clinical study, 116 children with asthma were randomly assigned to treatment with an inhaled beta-2-agonist (salbutamol 0.2 mg) plus an inhaled corticosteroid (budesonide 0.2 mg) three times a day (BA+CS) or to an inhaled beta-2-agonist (salbutamol 0.2 mg) plus a placebo three times a day (BA+PL). After a median follow-up time of 22 months, 26 patients receiving BA+PL (45%) had withdrawn from randomized treatment, mainly because of asthma symptoms, compared with three withdrawals in the patients receiving BA+CS (p less than 0.0001). The FEV1, expressed as a percentage of the predicted value for age, sex, and height, showed an absolute increase of 7.0% after 2 months of BA+CS compared with a decrease of 4.0% after 2 months of BA+PL. This 11% difference in percent predicted FEV1 (95% confidence interval, 7 to 15%; p less than 0.0001) was then maintained after a median follow-up period of 22 months. Postbronchodilator FEV1 showed an absolute increase of 3.7% predicted within 2 months in patients receiving BA+CS and an absolute decrease of 1.1% predicted in children receiving BA+PL (p = 0.0005). Thereafter, this difference between the two treatment groups was maintained. Average peak expiratory flow rate (PEFR) increased from baseline by 36.6 L/min in the BA+CS group compared with 3.7 L/min in the BA+PL group (p = 0.003). This difference then remained for the median follow-up time of 22 months.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

References

YearCitations

1984

3K

1985

1.3K

1989

1.1K

1990

1.1K

1989

951

1991

789

1990

602

1985

452

1987

425

1981

399

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