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CHRONIC ASTHMA GUIDELINES IN ADOLESCENTS & ADULTS 2007. Bushra A. Hadi Asthma Guidelines Implementation Project. Guidelines for the management of chronic asthma in adolescents and adults. Levels of Evidence. Aims of the Guideline.
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CHRONIC ASTHMA GUIDELINESIN ADOLESCENTS & ADULTS 2007 Bushra A. Hadi Asthma Guidelines Implementation Project
Guidelines for the management of chronic asthma in adolescents and adults
Aims of the Guideline • to improve asthma care for the greatest number through uniform treatment protocols • to use the most efficacious and cost-effective drug combinations • to facilitate teaching of doctors and other health care workers • to empower patients to understand their disorder, and the types & goals of therapy
Key Features of New Guidelines • Emphasis on defining & achieving control of asthma • The positioning of leukotriene blockers in the treatment of chronic asthma • New evidence on the safety & optimal use of asthma medications • The ongoing need to emphasize the use of anti-inflammatory medication as the foundation of asthma treatment
2006 GINA Goalsof Asthma Management • Achieve and maintain control of symptoms • Maintain normal activity levels including exercise • Maintain pulmonary function as close to normal as possible • Prevent asthma exacerbations • Avoid adverse effects from asthma medications • Prevent asthma mortality • a • b • c • d • e • f
Essential steps in the Management of Asthma to Achieve Control: • Establish the diagnosis of asthma • Assess severity • Implement asthma treatment • Set goals for control of asthma • Prevent/avoidance measures • Pharmacotherapy • Achieve and monitor control • a • b • c • d
STEP 1 • Suspect asthma on basis of symptoms and signs, particularly if there is variability
STEP 2 • Search for associated factors such as: • a. Atopy - allergic rhinitis, conjunctivitis, eczema • b. Family history of asthma or other allergic disorders • c. Onset of, or presence of, symptoms during childhood • d. Identifiable triggers for symptoms and relieving factors such as improvement with a bronchodilator or deterioration with exercise • e. Exposure to known asthma sensitizers in the workplace • f. Reversibility shown on lung function tests • g. Optional tests include: • Full blood count to check the eosinophil count • Total serum IgE • Skin prick tests or RAST in blood to look for evidence of atopy • Methacholine or histamine or exercise challenge tests
Diagnostic lung function values • Reversibility: • An increase of FEV1 of >12% and 200ml, 15-30min after the • inhalation of 200-400mcg salbutamol, or a 20% improvement • in PEF from baseline. • Hyper-responsiveness: • Methacholine/histamine challenge • Exercise: A fall of 20% in PEF (or 15% in FEV1) measured • 5-10 minutes apart – before and then after cessation of exercise • (e.g. running for 6 minutes) • Diurnal Variation: • Diurnal Variation in PEF of more than 20% • Distinguishing between COPD and asthma when FEV shows obstruction: • Improvement of FEV1 from baseline (>12% and 200ml) • after a 2 week trial of oral prednisone (40mg daily)
C.ASTHMA TREATMENT • Preventative/Avoidance Measures • Pharmacotherapy
Preventative/Avoidance Measures • A. Avoid exposure to personal and second-hand tobacco smoke • B. Avoid contact with furry animals • C. Reduce pollen exposure • D. Reduce exposure to house dust mite • E. Avoid sensitisers and irritants (dust and fumes) which aggravate or cause asthma, especially in the workplace • F. Avoid food and beverages containing preservatives • G. Avoid drugs that aggravate asthma such as beta-blockers (including eye drops) and aspirin and non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs
PHARMACOTHERAPY • (A) RELIEVERS : • Act only on airway smooth muscle spasm • i.e. Cause BRONCHODILATION • symptoms acutely - cough • - SOB • - wheeze/tightness • Take when necessary
PHARMACOTHERAPY • (B) CONTROLLERS : • underlying INFLAMMATION • and/or cause prolonged bronchodilation • i.e. • mucosal swelling • • secretions • • irritability of smooth muscle • Take regularly, even when well • For ALL asthmatics, except mild intermittent
Key prescribing recommendations • All patients should be prescribed inhaled, short-acting ß2agonists such as salbutamol; 200mcg (2 puffs) as needed for use as symptom relief for acute asthma symptoms (Evidence A). • All patients should receive inhaled corticosteroids as baseline asthma treatment except those classified as mild intermittent asthma (Evidence A).
Inhaled Corticosteroids • Mainstay of Rx of chronic asthma • symptoms & lung function decline • • give twice daily regularly • • direct lung delivery = lower dose • • use of spacers delivery & side effects • • safe 1000µg BDP/day (800µg Bud/day)
Inhaled Corticosteroids • Beclomethasone • • Beclate • Becotide • Becloforte • • Clenil • Viarox • Aerobec • Budesonide • • Inflammide • Budeflam • Fluticasone • • Flixotide • Flomist
RECOMMENDED ADD-ON Rx • 1. Add a LABA if asthma is not well controlled on low • dose ICS (Evidence A). This option is preferred to • doubling the dose of ICS; however, not all patients • respond to LABAs. Never use LABAs alone. • 2. An alternative is to double the dose of ICS or add • leukotriene modifiers (Evidence A) or slow-release • theophyllines (Evidence B) • 3. Oral corticosteroids should only be used as a • maintenance treatment with extreme caution. • 4. Referral to a specialist is recommended when asthma • is difficult to control
Long-Acting Beta-2 Agonists • Salmeterol • Formoterol • Combined with steroid • Serevent • Oxis • Foradil • Foratec • Seretide • Symbicord
Long-Acting Beta-2 Agonists • • cause bronchodilation for 12+ hours • • give twice daily regularly • • delayed onset of action - Salmeterol
Indications for Long-Acting Beta-Agonists • Patients with poor control despite moderate dose of inhaled steroids especially when: • They should not be used as monotherapy but in combination with inhaled steroids. • nocturnal asthma • wide variation in am & pm PEF • exercise-induced asthma
Leukotriene Receptor Antagonists • Montelukast - Singulair • Zafirlukast - Accolate • Advantages: • • Unique mode of action • • Oral form and “one dose fits all” • • Add-on effect when used with inhaled steroids • • Anti-inflammatory and anti-bronchoconstrictor
STEP-WISE Rx of ASTHMA • Only an option for those with mild intermittent asthma at diagnosis or who remain consistently well-controlled and treatment is progressively reduced STEP 1: • Inhaled beta-agonist PRN
STEP-WISE Rx of ASTHMA STEP 2: • Inhaled beta-agonist PRN • Low dose inhaled corticosteroid 250-500ug/day (BDP equivalent) • Start patients with mild chronic persistent asthma at this step
STEP-WISE Rx of ASTHMA STEP 3: • Inhaled beta-agonist PRN & • Low dose inhaled corticosteroid 250-500ug/day (BDP equivalent) & • Inhaled long-acting beta-agonist (PREFERRED) OR • Low dose inhaled corticosteroid 250-500ug/day (BDP equivalent) & • Oral leukotriene modifier OR • Moderate dose inhaled corticosteroid 500-1000ug/day (BDP equivalent)
STEP-WISE Rx of ASTHMA STEP 4: • Inhaled beta-agonist PRN & • Moderate dose inhaled corticosteroid 500-1000ug/day (BDP equivalent) & • Inhaled long-acting beta-agonist (PREFERRED) OR • Moderate dose inhaled corticosteroid 500-1000ug/day • Oral leukotriene modifier OR • Moderate dose inhaled corticosteroid 500-1000ug/day & • Oral SR theophylline BD
STEP-WISE Rx of ASTHMA STEP 5: • Inhaled beta-agonist PRN & • High dose inhaled corticosteroid >1000ug/day (BDP equivalent) & • Inhaled long-acting beta-agonist AND • Oral leukotriene modifier OR • Oral SR theophylline BD
STEP-WISE Rx of ASTHMA STEP 6: • Inhaled beta-agonist PRN & • High dose inhaled corticosteroid >1000ug/day (BDP equivalent) & • Inhaled long-acting beta-agonist PLUS • Oral leukotriene modifier PLUS • Oral SR theophylline BD AND/OR • Long term oral corticosteroids PLUS • SPECIALIST REFERRAL
Treatment Choices • Depend on: • • availability • • cost • • efficacy in individual patients • • patient preference • • side effect profile
Cost Compromises • • oral steroids vs. inhaled steroids • ~ long-term side effects: “save now, pay later” • • oral theophylline vs. inhaled beta-agonists • ~ less effective, more side effects, titration difficult • • short-acting vs. long-acting theophyllines • • short-acting vs. long-acting beta-agonists • • oral vs. inhaled long-acting beta-agonists • ~ less effective, more side effects • • MDIs ± spacers vs. dry powder devices
Therapy to avoid! • • sedatives & hypnotics • • cough syrups • • anti-histamines • • duplication of same type (eg. Ventolin + Berotec) • • combination tablets • • immunosuppressive drugs • • immunotherapy • • maintenance oral prednisone >10mg/day
Routine Asthma Questions • 1) How many times/week do asthma symptoms (cough, wheeze, SOB) affect you during the day? • 2) How many times/week do asthma symptoms disturb your sleep? • 3) How many times/week do you use your relievers? • 4) Has asthma caused time off work/school or interfered with your usual activities? • 5) Have you needed to attend as an emergency • since your last visit / over the last year?
Managing partly/uncontrolled patients • Check the inhaler technique • Check adherence and understanding of medication • Consider aggravation by: • Exposure to triggers/allergens at home or work • Co-morbid conditions: GI reflux, rhinitis/sinusitis, cardiac • Medications: Beta-blockers, NSAIDs, Aspirin • Consider stepping up treatment • Consider need for short course oral steroids • Review self-management plan
ASSESS GOOD INHALER TECHNIQUE RINSE MOUTH AFTER INHALATION OF CORTICOSTEROIDS
ASSESS GOOD SPACER TECHNIQUE RINSE MOUTH AFTER INHALATION OF CORTICOSTEROIDS