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Efficacy of inhaled salbutamol with and without prednisolone for first acute rhinovirus-induced wheezing episode

Vahlberg Tero; Hurme Pekka; Camargo Carlos A; Vuorinen Tytti; Homil Kiara; Gern James E; Turunen Riitta; Jartti Tuomas; Lehtinen Pasi

Efficacy of inhaled salbutamol with and without prednisolone for first acute rhinovirus-induced wheezing episode

Vahlberg Tero
Hurme Pekka
Camargo Carlos A
Vuorinen Tytti
Homil Kiara
Gern James E
Turunen Riitta
Jartti Tuomas
Lehtinen Pasi
Katso/Avaa
Publisher's version (649.6Kb)
Lataukset: 

doi:10.1111/cea.13960
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Julkaisun pysyvä osoite on:
https://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi-fe2022012710576
Tiivistelmä

Background

Acute rhinovirus-induced wheezing is common in young children and may respond to systemic corticosteroid. There are no trials on the efficacy of inhaled beta2-agonist in this clinical scenario.

Objective

To study post hoc the short-term (up to 2 months) efficacy of inhaled beta2-agonist with and without oral corticosteroid in the first acute rhinovirus-induced severe wheezing episode in young hospitalized children.

Methods

The study population came from two randomized controlled trials comparing oral prednisolone (2 mg/kg/d for 3 days) to placebo: Vinku (n = 35, NCT00494624) used high-dose regular nebulized salbutamol (0.15 mg/kg 2–4 h intervals) and Vinku2 (n = 60, NCT00731575, EudraCT 2006-007100-42) used inhaled salbutamol on-demand. Both studies used identical detailed follow-up assessments. The primary outcome of the former was the duration of hospitalization and of the latter the occurrence of and the time to a new physician-confirmed wheezing episode within 2 months after discharge. Treatment groups included salbutamol high-dose vs. salbutamol on-demand while adjusting for prednisolone status and acknowledging for interactions with exception of the duration of hospitalization in which prednisolone groups could not be fully used due to protocol differences.

Results

Median age of subjects was 13 months, 32% were sensitized and 22% had doctor-diagnosed eczema. In the duration of hospitalization, salbutamol high-dose/placebo versus salbutamol on-demand/placebo groups did not differ (p = .12). In the occurrence of and time to relapse within 2 months, a significant group × treatment interaction was observed (both p = .02), such that high-dose group had less and longer time to relapses than on-demand group in prednisolone arm (both p < .05), but no difference was detected in placebo arm (both p > .26).

Conclusions

In young, hospitalized children with first episode of rhinovirus-induced wheezing, high-dose inhaled salbutamol may interact with oral prednisolone. However, further trials are warranted.

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