H1N1 vaccine safe and effective in patients with asthma – American Pharmacists Association, pharmacist.com

H1N1 vaccine safe and effective in patients with asthma
American Pharmacists Association, pharmacist.com
Trial cosponsored by NIAID and NHLBI demonstrates safety and efficacy of 2009 H1N1 influenza vaccine among asthma patients, including those taking
People with severe asthma need higher dose of H1N1 vaccine:StudySify
Some older asthma patients may need high-dose H1N1 vaccineCIDRAP
People with severe asthma need higher H1N1 doseRockford Register Star
News-Medical.net
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ACAAI: Asthma Drug Safe, Effective in Blacks – MedPage Today

ACAAI: Asthma Drug Safe, Effective in Blacks
MedPage Today
PHOENIX — The asthma medication budesonide/formoterol (Symbicort) is safe and effective in African-American patients, according to two studies presented
ACAAI: Lung Tests Help Assess Asthma in Young PatientsMedPage Today
ACAAI: Obesity Linked to Asthma Among Allergic PatientsMedPage Today
ACAAI: Antibody Shows Benefit in Asthma SubtypeMedPage Today
MedPage Today
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Discovery of Taste Buds on Lungs Enabled Scientists to Make an Effective Drug … – StarCityNews.com


Telegraph.co.uk

Discovery of Taste Buds on Lungs Enabled Scientists to Make an Effective Drug
StarCityNews.com
There are many diseases that cause harm to human lungs but the most common of them all is asthma, also known as chronic inflammatory disease of the airways.
Discovery could lead to new asthma treatmentsLos Angeles Times
'Taste Buds' In Lung Tissue Could Help Ease Asthma AttacksRTT News
Lungs Have Bitter Taste Receptors That May Help Treat AsthmaTIME
LiveScience.com –TopNews United Kingdom –Gant Daily
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National Study Shows Drug Effective for Hard-to-Control Asthma – WMTV

Information from the University of Wisconsin Hospital and Clinics:

National Study Shows Drug Effective for Hard-to-Control Asthma

Madison, Wis. – An already available drug eases asthma in patients whose breathing problems persist while using inhaled corticosteroids, according to study results released this week.

University of Wisconsin-Madison researchers who were part of the trial say the ability to prescribe tiotropium bromide – which is already prescribed for chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) under the brand name Spiriva – adds another weapon to the fight against asthma.

“This is good news because sometimes patients don’t respond to low doses of inhaled corticosteroids, and raising the dose doesn’t always work, either,’’ says Dr. Christine Sorkness, professor of pharmacy at the UW School of Pharmacy. “This gives physicians another option for patients whose asthma is not being adequately controlled.”

Sorkness and Dr. Robert Lemanske, professor of pediatrics and medicine and head of the UW division of pediatric allergy, immunology, and rheumatology at the UW School of Medicine and Public Health, led the UW part of the trial, which enrolled 21 of the 210 adults who took part in the national study. Study results are being released this week in the New England Journal of Medicine and at the Annual Congress of the European Respiratory Society in Barcelona, Spain.

The National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI) supported the study, which compared three tactics for treating uncontrolled asthma. In one treatment, participants received a doubled dose of inhaled corticosteroids; in the second, inhaled corticosteroids were supplemented by a long-acting beta-agonist (salmeterol); and in the third, the inhaled corticosteroids were supplemented with a long-acting anticholinergic drug (tiotropium bromide). Anticholinergics block the nerves that tighten the muscles around the lungs’ airways whereas beta-agonists relax the muscles lining the breathing passages of the lungs.

Before the trial, the patients averaged 77 days per year when their asthma was under control and they didn’t need to use their albuterol rescue inhalers. Doubling corticosteroids gave patients another 19 symptom-free days on average, while adding tiotropium to low-dose corticosteroids gave them another 48, similar to the improvement they had on corticosteroids plus salmeterol. But increasing corticosteroids and using beta- agonists both have risks,

“This is the first study to explore adding an anticholinergic inhaler to low-dose inhaled corticosteroids,” said Dr. James Kiley, director of the NHLBI’s division of lung diseases. “The Asthma Clinical Research Network is designed to address exactly these kinds of practical and important management questions, with the ultimate goal of helping asthma patients.”

In addition to UW-Madison, other members of the Asthma Clinical Research Network who took part in this trial include: Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Boston; Columbia University, New York City; Duke University, Durham, N.C.; The University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston; National Jewish Medical and Research Center, Denver; University of California, San Diego; University of California, San Francisco; Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis; and Wake Forest University. The data coordinating center is at Penn State College of Medicine in Hershey, Pa.

Once-Daily Fluticasone Furoate Provides Effective Control in Symptomatic … – DG News


UK News Reporter

Once-Daily Fluticasone Furoate Provides Effective Control in Symptomatic
DG News
BARCELONA — September 20, 2010 — Once-daily fluticasone furoate is well tolerated and provides effective asthma control in symptomatic
New Hope For Asthma SufferersUK News Reporter
New Combination for Asthma Shows Encouraging Results in Delivering Efficacy PR Newswire UK (press release)

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COPD Drug Effective for Some Asthmatics – CalorieLab Calorie Counter News


Healthy Living

COPD Drug Effective for Some Asthmatics
CalorieLab Calorie Counter News
Spiriva and an inhaled steroid improved breathing and controlling asthma better than two doses of the steroid in hard to treat cases.
Spiriva as good as Serevent in asthma studyThe Associated Press
Pfizer's Spiriva brings hope to asthma patientsHealthy Living
Early Trial Suggests COPD Drug Might Help Some AsthmaticsBusinessWeek
UPI.com –One News Page –Los Angeles Times
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