Home | About Jan Darpan | Contact Us | Subscribe
Jan Darpan choose location


Spiriva, is as Good as Glaxo's Serevent says Asthma Study

Sep 21, 2010   01:43 AM

  • Spiriva for Asthma
    Spiriva for Asthma
  • Spiriva for Asthma
    Spiriva for Asthma
  • Spiriva for Asthma
    Spiriva for Asthma
Scientists of a U.S. government-funded asthma study had to spend nearly $1 million of taxpayers' money after British drug-maker GlaxoSmithKline PLC declined to donate its asthma drug and look-alike dummy medicine for the study, which compared two other treatments. Researchers have found a possible new treatment for adults with hard-to-control asthma. Editors of the New England Journal of Medicine, which published the study, chastised Glaxo, saying its actions made the research harder and more expensive to do.

"In the end, the study results provided the truth" — the drug, Spiriva, was as good as Glaxo's Serevent, they wrote. The study was published online Sunday to coincide with a presentation at a medical meeting in Barcelona, Spain.

About 300 million people worldwide suffer from asthma. In the U.S., 22 million Americans have asthma, which kills about 4,000 a year. For people who can't control their asthma with inhaled steroid medicine, current guidelines call for doubling the dose or adding a different drug that relaxes the muscles to help patients breathe. Researchers tested three inhaled treatments: doubling the steroid dose, adding Glaxo's Serevent or adding Boehringer Ingelheim's Spiriva, which is approved for emphysema and other chronic lung conditions, but not asthma. Researchers found Spiriva worked better than a double steroid dose and was as effective as Serevent. When the study first began, patients on average had 77 asthma-free days a year — days in which they had no symptoms and did not have to use their rescue inhaler. Doubling the steroid medicine gave patients an extra 19 asthma-free days; taking Spiriva gave them an additional 48 days with no symptoms, and taking Serevent gave them an extra 51 days. Two years ago, safety concerns were raised with Spiriva inhalers. But the Food and Drug Administration earlier this year said recent data do not show a connection between the inhaler and previously reported risks of stroke, heart attack and death.
Glaxo declined to participate because Spiriva is not approved for treating asthma. The company also "lacked adequate information in this case to understand what the impact would be on patients in the trial.”

The study's leader, Dr. Stephen Peters of Wake Forest University Baptist Medical Center in North Carolina, said that since his team did not have access to Glaxo's drug, they bought it from a third-party supplier and hired another company to make the placebo — at a cost of $900,000.


http://judiciary.edgeboss.net/wmedia/judiciary/constitution/const04242012.wvxBhindi JewellersWoodlandsMalani JewelersMehta Internal Medicine