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Obesity May Influence Response to Asthma
Medications
As the nation’s collective waistline has swelled
in recent decades, rates of asthma diagnoses also have
accelerated. Indeed, much research has affirmed a link
between the two conditions.
But doctors also recognize that asthma may not behave
the same way among people who have different body types.
With a variety of asthma medications on the market,
what kinds work best for lean people and what kinds
work best for obese people? The answer may be different
for each group.
A new study suggests that people who are overweight
or obese may have better results with the prescription
pill sold as Singulair than with a type of inhaled
steroid, while leaner people may have better luck with
an inhaled steroid, called beclomethasone and sold
as beclovent, vanceril and other brand names. The findings
appear in the new issue of the European Respiratory
Journal.
“It is increasingly recognized that obese people
are more prone to develop asthma, but there is no information
about whether obesity influences people’s responses
to particular asthma medications,” says lead
author Marc Peters-Golden, M.D., professor of internal
medicine and director of the Fellowship Program in
Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine at the University
of Michigan Medical School.
“Our findings are the first to suggest the possibility
that obesity might be a factor that influences how
well asthmatics respond to particular medications,” Peters-Golden
says.
Singulair is the brand name of montelukast sodium
and is sold by Merck & Co., which funded this study.
Researchers looked at data from four previous multi-center,
randomized clinical trials from 3,073 patients with
moderate asthma. The data included the patients’ responses
to Singulair/montelukast, a beclomethasone inhaled
steroid and a placebo, and the participants’ body
mass index numbers, which placed them in the categories
of normal, overweight and obese.
In general, the severity of people’s asthma
was found to be greater among those in the overweight
and obese groups, which supports findings from other
studies.
In addition, the inhaled steroid was found to be better
than Singulair at increasing the number of asthma control
days (ACD) among people in the normal weight category.
An ACD is defined as a day with no more than two puffs
of an inhaler, no night-time awakenings and no asthma
attacks.
On the other hand, the inhaled steroid resulted in
a reduced effect in the percentage of ACDs among obese
people in the study – that is, the benefit of
the inhaled steroid declined with increasing body mass
index.
In contrast, the positive impact of Singulair did
not decrease in obese and overweight people when compared
to its impact on people of normal weight. The research
also suggests that the higher a person’s body
mass index, the greater his or her response to Singulair
compared to a placebo, a pill with no medicinal benefit.
This is an indication, Peters-Golden says, that obese
and overweight people may in fact respond better to
this medication.
Still, he is not inclined to suggest that doctors
change the way in which they prescribe medication – not
yet, anyway.
“Our study looks back at material from previous
trials. I’d like to see a prospective study in
which lean patients and heavy patients are enrolled
at the outset, and you compare both types of medications
in both groups,” Peters-Golden says. If verified
by other studies, this insight may help physicians
to better tailor medication regimens to meet individual
patient needs.
Peters-Golden also notes that much research about
asthma and other conditions is exploring the possibility
that genetic factors might explain individual variations
in responses to medications. He says it is likely that
a variety of factors, including genetic ones and acquired
factors such as weight, combine in a complex and intertwined
manner to influence a person’s reaction to medications.
Information about Singulair/montelukast: This medication,
usually taken once a day, is a type of leukotriene
antagonist – that is, it blocks leukotrienes
in the body. Leukotrienes are chemicals in the human
body that can affect the breathing passages. Information
about the beclomethasone inhaled steroid: Beclomethasone
is a steroid that prevents the release of substances
in the body that cause inflammation. Inhalation of
beclomethasone prevents asthma attacks and other conditions
involving inflammations of the lung tissues. |