Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0010200 (cough)
23,843 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The present study was conducted to describe and compare the in vivo performance (systemic exposure), clinical and laboratory safety of a fixed combinational product of inhaled reproterol (CAS 54063-54-6) plus disodium cromoglycate (DSCG; CAS 15826-37-6) using a novel freon (CFC)-free metered dose inhaler (MDI), which uses 1,1,1,2,3,3,3-heptafluoropropane (HFA-227; CAS 431-89-0) as propellant and polyoxyethylene glyceryl trioleate (Tagat TO; CAS 68958-64-5) as surfactant relative to the conventional freon-driven MDI Allergospasmin in healthy male and female volunteers. Twenty-four young male and female healthy subjects were randomly allocated in gender-balanced fashion to 4 parallel treatment groups with single and repeated dosing of either reproterol + DSCG by HFA- or CFC-MDI (each time N = 8) or placebo by HFA- or CFC-MDI (each time N = 4) using matched placebo devices thus allowing a double-blind (with regard to placebo) approach. Treatments consisted of a single morning dose of 2 actuations followed 4 days later by a 1 week treatment course of 2 actuations four times daily. Subjects were investigated extensively in terms of blood pressure, pulse rate, electrocardiography, spirometry, respiratory rate, body temperature, laboratory safety (haematology, clinical chemistry, urinalysis) and clinical well-being. There were no treatment, compound or device related effects for any of the tolerability and safety end points. The treatments were well tolerated. In particular, there was no irritative cough or any sign of broncho-irritation on application. Adverse events were reported in a total of 9 subjects: 3/8, 4/8, 0/4 and 2/4 subjects treated with reproterol + DSCG by HFA-MDI, reproterol + DSCG by CFC-MDI, placebo by HFA-MDI and placebo by CFC-MDI, respectively. Of these, 6 events in 6 subjects receiving the active treatments were considered probably or definitely related to the test drug administration (i.e. adverse drug reactions): after reproterol + DSCG one subject in each treatment group (HFA-MDI and CFC-MDI) complained of an unpleasant bitter taste immediately after application; one further subject in each group complained of headache. Under treatment with reproterol + DSCG by CFC-MDI one male subject complained of mild transient nausea with onset on day 5. Under treatment with reproterol + DSCG by HFA-MDI one female subject complained of mild dizziness and mildly disturbed (blurred) vision with onset on day 1. All adverse events occurred only transitory and required no treatment. Systemic exposure, evaluated by the plasma concentrations of DSCG at 1 h after application, was slightly higher with the HFA-MDI compared to the CFC-MDI. It is concluded that the safety, tolerability and in vivo performance of the newly developed freon-free MDI is at least as well tolerable as the already marketed freon-driven conventional formulation.
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PMID:Tolerability and in vivo performance of a novel freon-free metered dose inhaler for a fixed combinational product of reproterol and disodium cromoglycate. 968 24

The objective of this study was to compare the long-term safety of a fixed combination of fenoterol hydrobromide (50 microg) and ipratropium bromide (20 microg) delivered using a metered dose inhaler (MDI) formulated with a non-chlorinated propellant, hydrofluoroalkanel34a (HFA-MDI), with delivery using the conventional chlorofluorocarbon propellant (CFC-MDI, Berodual/Bronchodual). The study was designed according to Safety Assessment of Marketed Medicines (SAMM) guidelines, to reflect as far as possible the use of MDls under normal prescribing conditions. Two thousand and twenty-seven patients with chronic airways obstruction (CAO) were enrolled from 99 centres in France, 95 centres in Germany and 24 centres in Italy. Following a 2-week run-in period, patients were randomized on a 2:1 basis (1,348 patients to HFA-MDI, 679 patients to CFC-MDI) to receive a flexible dose regimen of the combination (2 puffs, 2-4 times a day, as prescribed by the investigator) during a 12-week open label phase. The overall incidence of adverse events was comparable between both groups. In addition, the incidence of respiratory side effects was also similar, with CAO exacerbations or bronchitis the most frequently recorded events. The safety profile of the HFA formulation was comparable to those of the marketed CFC-MDIs used in Germany and France/Italy. No clinically significant differences were detected between HFA134a or CFC driven inhalers on the switch from CFC- to HFA-MDI (2 weeks before randomisation versus 2 weeks after randomization). There was a trend for taste complaints to be reported more frequently by patients in the HFA-MDI group (0.7% before randomization versus 3.4% after randomization). This, however, was an expected finding as the HFA134a formulation does have a different taste to the CFC formulation. No difference between formulations was observed in the incidences of coughing or paradoxical bronchospasm. The incidence of falls in FEV1 >15% within 15 min following inhalation at each of the clinic visits was 1.2% for both CFC- and HFA-MDIs. In conclusion, administration of a fenoterol/ipratropium bromide combination via hydrofluoroalkane-metered dose inhaler is as safe as delivery by the currently available chlorofluorocarbon-metered dose inhaler, in an extended population of patients with CAO under normal prescribing conditions.
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PMID:Comparison of the safety of drug delivery via HFA- and CFC-metered dose inhalers in CAO. 1078 Jul 56

The magnitude of improvement of respiratory symptoms (RS) and expiratory flows (EF) following corticosteroid treatment may vary from one asthmatic patient to another. The distribution of ratio of improvement of the above parameters was assessed in 937 patients with asthma of variable severity who took part in three clinical trials comparing the effects of chlorofluorocarbon-propelled beclomethasone dipropionate (CFC-BDP) with similar (n:316) or half-doses (n:581) of extrafine hydrofluoroalkane-propelled (HFA-BDP) on asthma control. We calculated the ratio of improvement of shortness of breath, wheezing, sleep disturbance, cough, and chest tightness over the following physiological parameters: forced expiratory volume in 1s (FEV1), FEF(25/75%), morning peak expiratory flow, and FVC, from the baseline value to the last set of measures in the study, while on the study medication. We hypothesized that the ratio of RS/EF would have a normal distribution and would be higher with extrafine HFA-BDP compared with CFC-BDP, which has a larger particle size, when FEV1 is used, as it mostly assesses large airways. Ratios of improvement were normally distributed for both drugs and no significant shift in its distribution curve was found for HFA-BDP. The ratio of changes in FEF(25/75%)/FEV1 was similar in the two groups. In conclusion, the ratio of improvement of RS/EF is normally distributed over a narrow range, showing a generally good correlation between improvements in EF and symptoms in asthma; it was, however, similar for the two BDP molecules tested. This may suggest that this ratio is not useful for evaluating the effect of corticosteroids on small airways, or that extrafine HFA-BDP acts at the level of large- to moderate-caliber airways to produce most of its beneficial effect.
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PMID:Comparative improvement of asthma symptoms and expiratory flows after corticosteroid treatment: a method to assess the effect of corticosteroids on large vs. small airways? 1603 7