This research study will compare the treatment effects of three different asthma medications in asthma subjects whose asthma is well controlled when they take fluticasone, an inhaled corticosteroid. The treatments are fluticasone, montelukast (an anti?leukotriene drug), and a combination therapy of fluticasone and salmeterol (a long-acting beta-agonist). Fluticasone, montelukast, and the combination therapy of fluticasone and salmeterol (Advair Diskus®) are all approved for the treatment of asthma. We are looking at whether the three treatments are equally effective for reducing the number and the severity of asthma attacks in subjects with mild to moderately severe asthma.
This trial will attempt to investigate whether asthmatic patients that are well controlled with low-dose twice daily inhaled corticosteroid (ICS) therapy can safely be switched to other modes of controller therapy without loss of asthma control. Patients demonstrating good control on twice-daily low-dose ICS will be randomized to one of three treatment groups: once-daily low-dose ICS (fluticasone), leukotriene receptor antagonist (montelukast), or once-daily combination therapy (fluticasone-salmeterol).
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
QUADRUPLE
Enrollment
500
fluticasone (100 microgram twice daily) treatment
Montelukast (5 or 10 mg each night).
fluticasone (100 microgram) plus salmeterol (50 microgram) each night
University of Alabama at Birmingham
Birmingham, Alabama, United States
National Jewish Hospital
Denver, Colorado, United States
Nemour's Childrens Center
Jacksonville, Florida, United States
University of Miami (and University of South Florida in Tampa)
Miami, Florida, United States
Emory University
Atlanta, Georgia, United States
Illinois Consortium (Northwestern, Univ. of Chicago, Univ. of Illinois)
Chicago, Illinois, United States
Indiana University
Indianapolis, Indiana, United States
Louisiana State University
New Orleans, Louisiana, United States
University of Minnesota
Minneapolis, Minnesota, United States
University of Missouri at Kansas City
Kansas City, Missouri, United States
...and 9 more locations
Treatment Failure
The primary outcome measure was treatment failure, defined as the occurrence of any one of the following events: hospitalization or an urgent medical visit for asthma initiated by the patient or physician; use of systemic corticosteroids for asthma or need for open-label use of inhaled corticosteroids for asthma, as determined by the study physician or an asthma care provider; a decrease in prebronchodilator forced expiratory volume in 1 second (FEV1) to more than 20% below the baseline value measured at randomization; a decrease in the morning peak expiratory flow rate to more than 35% below the baseline value (the mean over the final 2 weeks of the run-in period) on 2 consecutive days; use of 10 puffs or more per day of rescue beta-agonist for 2 consecutive days (except as medication before exercise); refusal of the patient to continue because of lack of satisfaction with treatment; or judgment by a physician that the patient should stop treatment for reasons of safety.
Time frame: 16 weeks
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