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Safety of As-Needed Budesonide-Formoterol in Mild Asthma: Data from the Two Phase III SYGMA Studies.
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- Author(s): FitzGerald, J. Mark; O'Byrne, Paul M.; Bateman, Eric D.; Barnes, Peter J.; Zheng, Jinping; Ivanov, Stefan; Lamarca, Rosa; Larsdotter, Ulrika; Emerath, Ulrika; Jansen, Gerreke; Puu, Margareta; Alagappan, Vijay K. T.; Surmont, Filip; Reddel, Helen K.
- Source:
Drug Safety; Apr2021, Vol. 44 Issue 4, p467-478, 12p
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- Abstract:
Introduction: Budesonide-formoterol taken as needed is an emerging treatment for mild asthma. Objective: We used data from the SYGMA studies to assess the safety of As-needed budesonide-formoterol compared with As-needed terbutaline and compared with maintenance budesonide. Methods: SYGMA 1 and 2 were 52-week, double-blind, parallel-group studies in patients aged ≥ 12 years with physician-assessed mild asthma. Patients were randomized to As-needed budesonide-formoterol 200/6 μg, twice-daily budesonide 200 μg as maintenance plus As-needed terbutaline 0.5 mg, and As-needed terbutaline 0.5 mg (SYGMA 1 only). Adverse events (AEs), serious AEs (SAEs), discontinuations due to AEs (DAEs), and study-defined asthma-related discontinuations from corresponding treatment groups in both studies were pooled. SYGMA 1 data were used for comparisons with As-needed terbutaline alone. Results: The pooled analysis included 3366 patients in the As-needed budesonide-formoterol group and 3369 in the budesonide maintenance group, with AEs in 40.8% and 42.5% of patients, respectively. Common AEs included viral upper respiratory tract infection (viral URTI) and URTI. SAE, DAE, and asthma-related discontinuation rates were similar with As-needed budesonide-formoterol and maintenance budesonide. Potential local and systemic corticosteroid class effects were reported in ≤ 1% of patients for each budesonide-containing regimen. In SYGMA 1, AEs were more common in the As-needed terbutaline (n = 1277) than As-needed budesonide-formoterol (n = 1277) groups (42.7 vs. 38.0%), as were DAEs (2.9 vs. 0.8%) and asthma-related discontinuations (1.6 vs. 0.3%). Conclusions: Budesonide-formoterol anti-inflammatory reliever therapy is generally well-tolerated in patients with mild asthma and has a safety profile similar to that of daily budesonide. No new safety signals were identified. ClinicalTrial.gov Identifiers: NCT02149199 (SYGMA 1) and NCT02224157 (SYGMA 2). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Abstract:
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