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Comparative study of budesonide inhalation suspension and montelukast in young children with mild persistent asthma

Authors :
James W. Baker
Tom Uryniak
Stanley J. Szefler
Mitchell Goldman
Philip E. Silkoff
Source :
The Journal of allergy and clinical immunology. 120(5)
Publication Year :
2007

Abstract

Background Budesonide inhalation suspension and the leukotriene receptor antagonist montelukast have demonstrated efficacy in children with mild persistent asthma, but comparative long-term studies in young children are needed. Objective To compare the long-term efficacy and safety of budesonide inhalation suspension and montelukast. Methods After a run-in period, children 2 to 8 years old with mild asthma or recurrent wheezing were randomized to once-daily budesonide inhalation suspension 0.5 mg or once-daily oral montelukast 4 or 5 mg for 52 weeks. Subjects were stepped up to twice-daily budesonide inhalation suspension or oral corticosteroids for mild or severe asthma worsening, respectively. The primary outcome was time to first additional medication for asthma worsening at 52 weeks. Secondary variables included times to the first additional asthma medication measured at 12 and 26 weeks; times to the first asthma exacerbation (mild and severe) measured at 12, 26, and 52 weeks; exacerbation rates (mild and severe) over a period of 52 weeks; diary variables (eg, peak expiratory flow [PEF]); patient-reported outcomes; and Global Physician and Caregiver Assessments. Results No significant between-group differences were observed for time to first additional asthma medication at 52 weeks; however, time to first additional asthma medication was longer (unadjusted P = .050) at 12 weeks and exacerbation rates were lower over a period of 52 weeks (unadjusted P = .034) for budesonide versus montelukast. Time to first severe exacerbation (requiring oral corticosteroids) was similar in both groups, but the percentage of subjects requiring oral corticosteroids over a period of 52 weeks was lower with budesonide (25.5% vs 32.0%). Peak flow and Caregiver and Physician Global Assessments favored budesonide. Conclusion Both treatments provided acceptable asthma control; however, overall measures favored budesonide inhalation suspension over montelukast. Clinical implications These findings are consistent with studies in older children demonstrating better outcomes with inhaled corticosteroids versus montelukast.

Details

ISSN :
10976825
Volume :
120
Issue :
5
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Journal of allergy and clinical immunology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....09c0ab093e9f2f534be1a7415b9ac999