Full article
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Abstract
Anticholinergic bronchodilators such as tiotropium, a potent long-acting drug, are central to the symptomatic treatment of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. Its role in asthma treatment has been recently investigated. This review critically evaluates documented evidence of clinical trials and assesses the
therapeutic implications of anticholinergic drugs in asthma management.
So far, the results of 10 Phases II and III randomized controlled trials, with a duration of 4 to 52 weeks,
evaluating the effect of adding tiotropium to the treatment of mild or severe asthma, have been published.
These trials involved 3,368 subjects with moderate asthma and 1,019 subjects with severe asthma. Also, 1 systematic review and 6 meta-analyses have appraised the results of published and unpublished trials
investigating the role of tiotropium in asthma. The results of the trials in mild to moderate asthma showed
that adding tiotropium to inhaled corticosteroids (ICSs) was not inferior to adding long-acting ß2-agonists
(LABAs). In addition, the safety and efficacy of tiotropium were similar to those of salmeterol. The results
of studies on severe asthma showed that adding tiotropium to a treatment with high doses of an ICS plus
LABA results in further improvement in lung function, increases the time to the first severe exacerbation
of asthma and to worsening of asthma, and improves asthma control. Except for dry mouth, the safety
profile of tiotropium was similar to placebo both in moderate and in severe asthma.
Adding tiotropium to an ICS or ICS plus LABA improves lung function, symptoms, and asthma control,
and in severe asthma, it increases the time to exacerbations, with a good safety profile. The effect seems
independent of baseline characteristics such as age, level of bronchial obstruction, smoking status, allergic
status, and bronchial reversibility.