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Common asthma inhaler causing deaths, researchers
assert
Three common asthma inhalers containing the drugs
salmeterol or formoterol may be causing four out of
five U.S. asthma-related deaths per year and should
be taken off the market, researchers from Cornell and
Stanford universities have concluded after a search
of medical literature.
They base these conclusions on a statistical analysis
of 19 published trials involving 33,826 patients. This
so-called meta-analysis found that patients who inhaled
the long-acting beta-agonists salmeterol (trade names
Serevent and Advair, both made by GlaxoSmithKline)
or formoterol (trade name Foradil, made by Novartis
Pharmaceuticals) were 3.5 times more likely to die
from asthma and 2.5 times more likely to be hospitalized
(whether or not death resulted), compared with those
taking a placebo.
The reason, say the researchers, is because although
these medications relieve asthma symptoms, they also
promote bronchial inflammation and sensitivity without
warning.
Nevertheless, asthma death is relatively rare -- 15
patients in the meta-analysis who were taking the beta-agonists
died, compared with three in the placebo group, over
a six-month period.
"In total, there are about 5,000 deaths a year
due to asthma, whether or not a person is taking a
long-acting beta-agonist," said Edwin Salpeter,
the J.G. White Distinguished Professor of Physical
Sciences Emeritus at Cornell, who led the statistical
analysis in the study. An eminent astrophysicist, Salpeter
has more recently focused his attention on medical
statistics. "We can show that overall it is statistically
significant that, compared to patients taking a placebo,
these long-acting beta-agonists kill a lot of people," he
said.
"These asthma deaths are generally in healthy
young adults," said his daughter, Shelley Salpeter,
the lead author of the paper appearing online and in
the June 20 issue of Annals of Internal Medicine. She
is a clinical professor of medicine at Stanford's School
of Medicine and a physician at Santa Clara Valley Medical
Center in San Jose, Calif.
"We estimate that approximately 4,000 out of
the 5,000 asthma deaths that occur in the U.S. each
year are actually caused by these long-acting beta-agonists,
and we urge that these agents be taken off the market," she
added.
Adding an anti-inflammatory drug to a long-acting
beta-agonist adds little benefit, report the Salpeters.
Advair, for example, (the fourth bestselling drug in
the world with $5.6 billion in annual sales), combines
salmeterol with an anti-inflammatory drug to provide
some protection against bronchial inflammation associated
with beta-agonists. But hospitalizations still doubled
for patients inhaling a long-acting beta-agonist combined
with an anti-inflammatory drug compared with asthma
patients taking a placebo and an anti-inflammatory
drug by itself.
Of the 19 studies surveyed in the meta-analysis, the
largest -- the Salmeterol Multicenter Asthma Research
Trial with 26,000 participants -- reported a fourfold
increased risk for asthma-related deaths and a twofold
increase in life-threatening asthma events in patients
using salmeterol. If older people who also suffered
from chronic obstructive pulmonary disease were removed
from the analysis, the Salpeters report, salmeterol
would be associated with a six times greater risk for
asthma-related deaths.
The meta-analysis found that 53 of 3,083 patients
inhaling beta-agonists were hospitalized for an asthma
attack compared with 12 of 2,008 patients who received
a placebo, meaning that there was one hospitalization
for every 71 patients treated with a long-acting beta-agonist
per year.
The Salpeters say that these two long-acting beta-agonists
can result in death because tolerance to them develops
over time.
"These agents can improve symptoms through bronchodilation
at the same time as increasing underlying inflammation
and bronchial hyper-responsiveness, thus worsening
asthma control without any warning of increased symptoms," said
Shelley Salpeter.
"It is particularly frightening that long-acting
beta-agonists are detrimental, whether salmeterol or
formoterol, whether taken alone or with anti-inflammatory
drugs, both for children and for adults," said
Ed Salpeter. |