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Microbiome Use to Stratify Inhaled Corticosteroids in Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (MUSIC) trial: baseline data and impact of inhaled corticosteroid withdrawal in severe COPD with frequent exacerbations

Authors :
Margaret M Band
Hollian Richardson
Jennifer Pollock
Heather Barclay
Simon Finch
Gourab Chowdhury
Devesh Dhasmana
Philip M. Short
James D. Chalmers
Diane Cassidy
Rekha Chaudhuri
Mike Lonergan
Furrah Hussain
Andrew Mackenzie
Pauline Billingham
Alison Dicker
Andrew Paul Smith
Megan Crichton
Holly R. Keir
Clare Clarke
Mohammad Majid Paracha
Source :
Airway pharmacology and treatment.
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
European Respiratory Society, 2020.

Abstract

Background: The MUSIC study is testing the impact of inhaled corticosteroid (ICS) and bronchodilator (LABA/LAMA) treatment on the upper and lower airway microbiome in patients with COPD (NCT02972476). Patients receiving ICS at baseline withdrew therapy for one month, followed by randomization to 3 different ICS regimes or combined LABA/LAMA for 3 months. Here we report rates of patients experiencing exacerbations during the withdrawal period Methods: Multicentre randomized controlled trial. Patients were aged >=40 years, current or exsmokers, FEV1/FVC Results: 122 patients were enrolled from 6 study sites. 52.5% of patients were male, mean age 67 years (standard deviation(SD) 8.1), and mean post-bronchodilator FEV1 54.9% predicted (SD 20.7). 48 patients had blood eosinophil counts 300cells/ul (18.0%). 57 patients experienced an exacerbation or adverse event leading to withdrawal during month 1., Rates of failure ranged from 42-69% with no differences between sites (p=0.52). Failure rates were 56.3% in low, 46.2% in moderate, 45.5% in high eosinophil groups (p=0.54). Failure rates were significantly higher in patients with FEV1 50% (41.8%), (odds ratio 2.23 95% CI 1.06 – 4.67,p=0.034). Conclusion: We found a high failure rate during 1 month switch to LABA/LAMA, particularly in patients with severe and very severe lung function impairment.

Details

ISSN :
02972476
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Airway pharmacology and treatment
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........26f2cef6e13dd334aa8e114a42b8b1e0
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1183/13993003.congress-2020.3253