Combination inhaler simplifies treatment for asthma
Chronic asthmatic patients can now benefit from a new treatment option that can help them to manage their ailment in an easy, effective manner with a single prescribed inhaler that contains two medicines as per a new review.
It is worth noting that the use of both beta2-agonist (formoterol) and a low-dose corticosteroid (budesonide) in a single inhaler and this review evaluated the new inhaler’s effectiveness.
From News-Medical.Net:
“Encouraging people to use their preventive medication is important, as it is often the case that people with asthma default on their inhaled corticosteroids,” said lead reviewer Christopher Cates, M.D., at the Community Health Sciences of St. George’s at the University of London. “This is partly because inhaled steroids do not make an immediate difference to asthma symptoms.”
In most studies, participants had treatment with a single inhaler – one inhalation of 80/4.5 milligrams of budesonide/formoterol twice daily, and as needed. Patients in the control groups used their prescribed inhaled corticosteroid with a separate reliever inhaler. Cates and his colleague evaluated three studies that included more than 4,200 adults and adolescents with chronic asthma. One study also included 224 children.
The Cochrane reviewers found no significant reduction in the number of asthma exacerbations that required hospitalization among the patients who used single inhaler therapy.
Carlos Camargo, M.D., an associate professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School, said that this single-inhaler therapy is a new approach to chronic asthma treatment is expected to provide great relief but requires further research before it can be recommended.


Individuals suffering from chronic asthma are likely to benefit from a new treatment option that can help them manage their health effectively with a single prescribed inhaler including two medicines, as per a new review.
Serious symptoms and disability associated with asthma can be avoided to a great extent if asthmatic people can follow the latest guidelines from the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute’s National Asthma Education and Prevention Program (NAEPP) were presented during the Annual Meeting of the
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