TY - JOUR
T1 - Long-term outcomes of bronchial thermoplasty in subjects with severe asthma
T2 - a comparison of 3-year follow-up results from two prospective multicentre studies
AU - Other members of the PAS2 Study Group
AU - Chupp, Geoffrey
AU - Laviolette, Michel
AU - Cohn, Lauren
AU - McEvoy, Charlene
AU - Bansal, Sandeep
AU - Shifren, Adrian
AU - Khatri, Sumita
AU - Grubb, G. Mark
AU - McMullen, Edmund
AU - Strauven, Racho
AU - Kline, Joel N.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
Copyright ©ERS 2017.
PY - 2017/8/1
Y1 - 2017/8/1
N2 - Bronchial thermoplasty is an endoscopic therapy for severe asthma. The previously reported, randomised sham-controlled AIR2 (Asthma Intervention Research 2) trial showed a significant reduction in severe asthma exacerbations, emergency department visits and hospitalisations after bronchial thermoplasty. More "real-world" clinical outcome data is needed.This article compares outcomes in bronchial thermoplasty subjects with 3 years of follow-up from the ongoing, post-market PAS2 (Post-FDA Approval Clinical Trial Evaluating Bronchial Thermoplasty in Severe Persistent Asthma) study with those from the AIR2 trial.279 subjects were treated with bronchial thermoplasty in the PAS2 study. We compared the first 190 PAS2 subjects with the 190 bronchial thermoplasty-treated subjects in the AIR2 trial at 3 years of follow-up. The PAS2 subjects were older (mean age 45.9 versus 40.7 years) and more obese (mean body mass index 32.5 versus 29.3 kg·m-2) and took higher doses of inhaled corticosteroids (mean dose 2301 versus 1961 μg·day-1). More PAS2 subjects had experienced severe exacerbations (74% versus 52%) and hospitalisations (15.3% versus 4.2%) in the 12 months prior to bronchial thermoplasty. At year 3 after bronchial thermoplasty, the percentage of PAS2 subjects with severe exacerbations, emergency department visits and hospitalisations significantly decreased by 45%, 55% and 40%, respectively, echoing the AIR2 results.The PAS2 study demonstrates similar improvements in asthma control after bronchial thermoplasty compared with the AIR2 trial despite enrolling subjects who may have had poorer asthma control.
AB - Bronchial thermoplasty is an endoscopic therapy for severe asthma. The previously reported, randomised sham-controlled AIR2 (Asthma Intervention Research 2) trial showed a significant reduction in severe asthma exacerbations, emergency department visits and hospitalisations after bronchial thermoplasty. More "real-world" clinical outcome data is needed.This article compares outcomes in bronchial thermoplasty subjects with 3 years of follow-up from the ongoing, post-market PAS2 (Post-FDA Approval Clinical Trial Evaluating Bronchial Thermoplasty in Severe Persistent Asthma) study with those from the AIR2 trial.279 subjects were treated with bronchial thermoplasty in the PAS2 study. We compared the first 190 PAS2 subjects with the 190 bronchial thermoplasty-treated subjects in the AIR2 trial at 3 years of follow-up. The PAS2 subjects were older (mean age 45.9 versus 40.7 years) and more obese (mean body mass index 32.5 versus 29.3 kg·m-2) and took higher doses of inhaled corticosteroids (mean dose 2301 versus 1961 μg·day-1). More PAS2 subjects had experienced severe exacerbations (74% versus 52%) and hospitalisations (15.3% versus 4.2%) in the 12 months prior to bronchial thermoplasty. At year 3 after bronchial thermoplasty, the percentage of PAS2 subjects with severe exacerbations, emergency department visits and hospitalisations significantly decreased by 45%, 55% and 40%, respectively, echoing the AIR2 results.The PAS2 study demonstrates similar improvements in asthma control after bronchial thermoplasty compared with the AIR2 trial despite enrolling subjects who may have had poorer asthma control.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85042789986&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1183/13993003.00017-2017
DO - 10.1183/13993003.00017-2017
M3 - Article
C2 - 28860266
AN - SCOPUS:85042789986
VL - 50
JO - European Respiratory Journal
JF - European Respiratory Journal
SN - 0903-1936
IS - 2
ER -