Authors
Tricia McKeever, Kevin Mortimer, Andrew Wilson, Samantha Walker, Christopher Brightling, Andrew Skeggs, Ian Pavord, David Price, Lelia Duley, Mike Thomas, Lucy Bradshaw, Bernard Higgins, Rebecca Haydock, Eleanor Mitchell, Graham Devereux, Timothy Harrison
Publication date
2018/3/8
Journal
New England Journal of Medicine
Volume
378
Issue
10
Pages
902-910
Publisher
Massachusetts Medical Society
Description
Background
Asthma exacerbations are frightening for patients and are occasionally fatal. We tested the concept that a plan for patients to manage their asthma (self-management plan), which included a temporary quadrupling of the dose of inhaled glucocorticoids when asthma control started to deteriorate, would reduce the incidence of severe asthma exacerbations among adults and adolescents with asthma.
Methods
We conducted a pragmatic, unblinded, randomized trial involving adults and adolescents with asthma who were receiving inhaled glucocorticoids, with or without add-on therapy, and who had had at least one exacerbation in the previous 12 months. We compared a self-management plan that included an increase in the dose of inhaled glucocorticoids by a factor of 4 (quadrupling group) with the same plan without such an increase (non-quadrupling group), over a period of 12 months. The …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
T McKeever, K Mortimer, A Wilson, S Walker… - New England Journal of Medicine, 2018