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Furoate Nasal Spray (furoate + nasal_spray)
Selected AbstractsEfficacy and safety of once-daily fluticasone furoate nasal spray in children with seasonal allergic rhinitis treated for 2 wkPEDIATRIC ALLERGY AND IMMUNOLOGY, Issue 3 2009Eli O. Meltzer The objective of this study was to evaluate the efficacy and safety of fluticasone furoate (FF) nasal spray 55 and 110 ,g once daily in children with seasonal allergic rhinitis (SAR). Patients (n = 554) received placebo nasal spray or FF, administered using a unique side-actuated device, in a 2-wk, randomized, double-blind study. Symptoms were evaluated by patients using a 4-point categorical scale. Efficacy assessments included reflective and instantaneous total nasal symptom scores (r/iTNSS). Primary analyses were conducted in patients aged 6,11 yr in the intent-to-treat population (ITT); the 2,11 yr group provided supportive analyses. In patients aged 6,11 yr, FF 110 ,g once daily significantly improved the daily rTNSS compared with placebo. FF 55 ,g once daily was only numerically better for rTNSS and iTNSS. Secondary pre-dose iTNSS and overall response to therapy were significant with FF 110 ,g. The significant findings for FF 110 ,g were supported by analyses in the entire ITT population of 2,11 yr olds. Both doses of FF were well tolerated. These study results suggest that FF nasal spray administered once daily for 2 wk is well tolerated and effective for the treatment of SAR symptoms in children aged 2,11 yr. [source] HPA axis safety of fluticasone furoate nasal spray once daily in children with perennial allergic rhinitisPEDIATRIC ALLERGY AND IMMUNOLOGY, Issue 3 2009Ita Tripathy The effects of intranasal corticosteroids (INSs) on the hypothalamic,pituitary,adrenal (HPA) axis should be assessed for any to be marketed INS. The objective of this study was to assess the effects of fluticasone furoate nasal spray (FFNS) on cortisol production (as a measure of HPA axis function) following 6 wk of treatment with FFNS 110 ,g once daily (QD) compared with placebo in pediatric patients with perennial allergic rhinitis (PAR). In this double-blind, parallel-group study, patients (n = 112) aged 2,11 yr with a 1-yr history of PAR (6 months for patients aged 2,3 yr) were randomized in a 1:1 ratio to either placebo or FFNS. Serum cortisol (SC) concentrations and urinary cortisol (UC) excretion were measured over a 24-h period at the randomization (baseline) and final treatment (week 6) visits for HPA axis evaluation in a domiciled environment (overnight in the clinic). Plasma samples were collected for FFNS at several time points over the 24 h after the final dose for pharmacokinetic analyses. FFNS was non-inferior to placebo with respect to change from baseline (expressed as a ratio) in 24-h SC weighted mean. The lower limit of the two-sided 95% confidence interval (CI) for the treatment ratio was greater than the pre-specified non-inferiority margin of 0.8 (treatment ratio = 0.97, 95% CI 0.88,1.07). UC excretion over 24 h at baseline and end of treatment was similar between treatment groups; no patients had 24-h excretion levels below normal range after 6 wk of treatment. Plasma concentrations of FFNS were generally non-quantifiable (<10 pg/ml). Results of the current study indicate that FFNS 110 ,g QD has no significant effect on HPA axis function in 2- to 11-yr-old pediatric patients with PAR. [source] Latest news and product developmentsPRESCRIBER, Issue 12 2007Article first published online: 4 OCT 200 NAO: GPs still not prescribing efficiently The National Audit Office (NAO) says NHS funds are being wasted through inefficient GP prescribing and patients not taking their medicines. The NAO's long-awaited report, Prescribing Costs in Primary Care (www.nao.org.uk), found large variations between PCTs in generic prescribing of statins, ACE inhibitors and angiotensin-II antagonists, and protonpump inhibitors; PCTs were also paying widely differing prices for these products. There was a five-fold variation in prescribing volume for clopidogrel between PCTs. These four drugs accounted for only 19 per cent of total spending but, if all practices matched the performance of the best 25 per cent, the NHS would save £200 million annually. PCTs should do more to rationalise prescribing and support their GPs, the NAO concludes. The NAO says that the cost of medicines dispensed for but not taken by patients lies somewhere in the range £100-£800 million annually. Strategies to reduce waste include public awareness campaigns and restricting supplies to four weeks (or two weeks for new medicines). Rosiglitazone may increase CV death risk A meta-analysis of 42 clinical trials has suggested that rosiglitazone is associated with increased risks of myocardial infarction (MI) and cardiovascular death (N Engl J Med 2007; published online 21 May: doi 10.1056/ NEJMoa072761). Like the COX-2 inhibitors, rosiglitazone was licensed without determining its possible effects on long-term cardiovascular outcomes, and interpretation of the latest findings is complicated by the multiple comparisons involved. For risk of MI, there was no significant difference between rosiglitazone and placebo (though this was of borderline statistical signifi-cance , p=0.07), metformin, sulphonylureas or insulin. Rosiglitazone was associated with a statistically significant 43 per cent increased risk compared with all comparators combined but the absolute increase in risk was very small (0.02 per cent). The trends were similar for risk of cardiovascular death, though rosiglitazone was associated with a 64 per cent increased risk compared with all comparators combined that was of borderline statistical significance (p=0.06). The authors acknowledge that their analysis pooled short-term studies that excluded patients at risk of heart disease and was not designed to determine cardiovascular outcomes, and they had no access to patientlevel data; as a result, there is uncertainty about their findings. Nevertheless, they say there is now an urgent need to clarify the risk associated with rosiglitazone. GlaxoSmithKline has rebutted the findings, stating that the cardiovascular risk profile of rosiglitazone is comparable with that of other oral antidiabetic drugs. The MHRA says warnings in the current SPCs for Avandia and Avandamet already reflect most of the data in the latest US review. The possible effects of rosiglitazone on cardiovascular events is currently being evaluated in the Rosiglitazone Evaluated for Cardiac Outcomes and Regulation of glycaemia in Diabetes (RECORD) study. Good management tool The Department of Health has published a disease management tool to enable PCTs to model local interventions that could reduce emergency admissions. The web-based ,voluntary good practice tool' will demonstrate how interventions in primary care and social care settings can improve the management of long-term conditions including cardiovascular disease, asthma and COPD, and dementia and depression. Counterfeit medicines The MHRA has issued an unprecedented three alerts about fake medicines in the legitimate supply chain, recalling all affected lot numbers. Three batches of Zyprexa 10mg tablets (olanzapine) were withdrawn after a company printing labels became suspicious and alerted Eli Lilly. Two of the batches, which contained 60 per cent of the stated active ingredient, had reached patients but no adverse events were reported. Two lots of parallel-imported Plavix 75mg tablets (clopidogrel) have been withdrawn after counterfeit packs were identified. The lots were in French original packaging but will have been overlabelled for the UK market. The counterfeits were mixed with genuine packs from Sanofi-Aventis. Fake Casodex 50mg tablets (bicalutamide) have been identified in a parallel import from France. The Royal Pharmaceutical Society reports that the fake contains 75 per cent of the stated dose of bicalutamide. Alcohol-free mometasone Schering-plough has introduced an alcohol-free formulation of mometasone furoate nasal spray (Nasonex) for hay fever. The company says that an alcohol vehicle causes nasal irritation and leaves an unpleasant aftertaste, adding that over 40 per cent of patients cite this as the main reason for stopping treatment, and over 50 per cent state a preference for an alcohol-free product. Aid to improve statin adherence Adherence to statin therapy can be improved if patients use a decision aid when they are offered treatment,US investigators say (Arch Intern Med 2007;167:1076-82). The decision aid estimated the individual's 10-year cardiovascular risk and the risk reduction from treatment, and summarised the disadvantages of statins.Patients with diabetes who used the aid knew more about their risk and were less indecisive about treatment than those who did not. The odds of having missed a dose over three months were three times higher for patients who had not used the aid. Online tool calculates switch savings A new online tool can help GPs estimate the savings achievable from switching patients to cheaper medicines. The Switch Saving Calculator, developed by the Prescribing Analysis & Support Team at the NHS Regional Drug and Therapeutics Centre in Newcastle, calculates potential savings based on past, current or projected use of the target drug. It can be applied to individual prescribers or scaled up to practice, commissioning group, PCT, health authority or even national level. Separate calculators are available for primary and secondary care. The current version calculates potential savings by switching from atorvastatin to simvastatin. The Newcastle team says other drugs will be added and they will update prices regularly. The calculator is at www.nyrdtc.nhs.uk:80/Services/presc_supp/ switch_saving_calculator/switch_saving_calculator.html. No improvement in drug information for patients leaving hospital The information given to patients discharged from hospital is not improving, according to the Healthcare Commission's annual patient survey (www.healthcare commission.org.uk). The 2006 survey found that the commonest reason patients were kept waiting for at least four hours to leave hospital was the delay in providing discharge medicines. Provision of written information increased from 62 per cent of patients in 2005 to 65 per cent in 2006. However, only 76 per cent said they had been told about their medicines in a way they could ,completely' understand (79 per cent in 2002). The proportion of patients reporting complete information about sideeffects also fell (from 40 per cent in 2005 to 37 per cent). Aspirin in preeclampsia A new meta-analysis has found that primary prevention with low-dose aspirin modestly but consistently reduces the risk of preeclampsia (Lancet 2007; published online 18 May). The study of 31 trials involving 32 217 women at low to moderate risk found that antiplatelet agents (mostly aspirin) reduced the risk of pre-eclampsia and preterm birth by 10 per cent without an increased risk of bleeding. The benefit was similar across subgroups. There were also nonsignificant reductions in the risk of small for age, stillborn and death before discharge. New from NICE NICE approves varenicline for NHS NICE has endorsed the use of varenicline (Champix) as an aid to smoking cessation within the NHS for England and Wales; it has already been approved for use in Scotland by the Scottish Medicines Consortium. Varenicline is a partial agonist at the ,4,2 nicotinic receptor. It alleviates craving and withdrawal symptoms, and reduces the rewarding and reinforcing effects of smoking. The commonest adverse effect is mild to moderate nausea, which improves with time.1 Varenicline is licensed for smoking cessation in adults; NICE says it should be offered as an option for smokers who say they want to quit as part of a programme of behavioural support. However, treatment should not be withheld if counselling and support are not available. NICE was critical of manufacturer Pfizer's economic arguments in favour of varenicline, which inappropriately included US data, assumed a single quit attempt and may have overestimated its efficacy. It nonetheless concluded that varenicline is more effective than nicotine replacement therapy (NRT) or bupropion (Zyban) in achieving continuous abstinence. NICE estimated that, compared with NRT, the odds of abstinence at one year with varenicline were 54 per cent greater. A Cochrane review1 concluded that abstinence was 66 per cent more likely with varenicline than with bupropion, and three times more likely than with placebo. There was also a benefit from offering smokers a wider choice of treatments. A 12-week course of varenicline costs £163.80; it is also licensed for an additional 12-week course and dose tapering may be considered for those at high risk of relapse. The final appraisal determination does not state which is the treatment of first choice for smoking cessation. NICE is currently preparing guidance on smoking cessation in pri-mary care, pharmacies and workplaces. Copyright © 2007 Wiley Interface Ltd [source] |