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Minimizing inhaled corticosteroids for COPD Therapeutics Initiative (University of British Columbia)
Description
Background: Therapeutics Letter 145 considers the evidence for inhaled corticosteroids (ICS) as a treatment for Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD). This condition is characterized by airway inflammation and irreversible airflow obstruction that causes significant respiratory symptoms and reduced quality of life. Cigarette smoking is the main cause. Stopping smoking helps symptoms and slows disease progression and improves symptoms. Drug therapy aims to alleviate symptoms, enhance functional capacity and prevent exacerbations, but has not shown by randomized trials to reduce mortality or improve quality of life. Findings: ICS have shown limited benefits for COPD symptoms and exacerbations but increased risks of serious harms. Guidelines recommend limiting ICS to severe COPD and only for repeated exacerbations. Studies show withdrawing ICS can be done safely for stable COPD patients with infrequent exacerbations, especially those with lower eosinophil counts. Provincial, national, and international guidelines now recommend limiting ICS prescriptions to severe COPD stages. Long-term ICS use may lead to serious side effects, including pneumonia and fractures. Conclusions: Initial COPD therapy should focus on short-acting bronchodilators, not ICS. Adding long-acting bronchodilators is recommended before considering ICS due to limited benefits and risks of serious harms. For persistent symptoms, long-acting muscarinic agonists or long-acting beta agonists are recommended, with the addition of ICS reserved for those with repeated exacerbations. Deprescribing ICS can be considered in clinically stable patients, particularly for those with infrequent exacerbations. When applicable, tapering ICS over several months is advised for patients with elevated eosinophil counts. Overall, the risks of serious harms from ICS typically outweigh their limited benefits for COPD patients.
Item Metadata
Title |
Minimizing inhaled corticosteroids for COPD
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Alternate Title |
Therapeutics Letter 145
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Creator | |
Date Issued |
2023-10
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Description |
Background: Therapeutics Letter 145 considers the evidence for inhaled
corticosteroids (ICS) as a treatment for Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary
Disease (COPD). This condition is characterized by airway inflammation
and irreversible airflow obstruction that causes significant respiratory
symptoms and reduced quality of life. Cigarette smoking is the main cause.
Stopping smoking helps symptoms and slows disease progression and
improves symptoms. Drug therapy aims to alleviate symptoms, enhance
functional capacity and prevent exacerbations, but has not shown by
randomized trials to reduce mortality or improve quality of life.
Findings: ICS have shown limited benefits for COPD symptoms and
exacerbations but increased risks of serious harms. Guidelines recommend
limiting ICS to severe COPD and only for repeated exacerbations. Studies
show withdrawing ICS can be done safely for stable COPD patients with
infrequent exacerbations, especially those with lower eosinophil counts.
Provincial, national, and international guidelines now recommend limiting
ICS prescriptions to severe COPD stages. Long-term ICS use may lead to
serious side effects, including pneumonia and fractures.
Conclusions: Initial COPD therapy should focus on short-acting
bronchodilators, not ICS. Adding long-acting bronchodilators is
recommended before considering ICS due to limited benefits and risks of
serious harms. For persistent symptoms, long-acting muscarinic agonists
or long-acting beta agonists are recommended, with the addition of ICS
reserved for those with repeated exacerbations. Deprescribing ICS can be
considered in clinically stable patients, particularly for those with infrequent
exacerbations. When applicable, tapering ICS over several months is
advised for patients with elevated eosinophil counts. Overall, the risks of
serious harms from ICS typically outweigh their limited benefits for COPD
patients.
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Subject | |
Genre | |
Type | |
Language |
eng
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Notes |
The UBC TI is funded by the BC Ministry of Health to provide evidence-based information about drug therapy. We neither formulate nor adjudicate provincial drug policies.
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Date Available |
2024-09-25
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Provider |
Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library
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Rights |
Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International
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DOI |
10.14288/1.0445446
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URI | |
Affiliation | |
Peer Review Status |
Reviewed
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Scholarly Level |
Faculty; Researcher
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Rights URI | |
Aggregated Source Repository |
DSpace
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Rights
Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International