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OBJECTIVE: To determine the comparative effectiveness and safety of current maintenance strategies in preventing exacerbations of asthma. DESIGN: Systematic review and network meta-analysis using Bayesian statistics. DATA SOURCES: Cochrane systematic reviews on chronic asthma, complemented by an updated search when appropriate. ELIGIBILITY CRITERIA TRIALS OF Adults with asthma randomised to maintenance treatments of at least 24 weeks duration and that reported on asthma exacerbations in full text. Low dose inhaled corticosteroid treatment was the comparator strategy. The primary effectiveness outcome was the rate of severe exacerbations. The secondary outcome was the composite of moderate or severe exacerbations. The rate of withdrawal was analysed as a safety outcome. RESULTS: 64 trials with 59,622 patient years of follow-up comparing 15 strategies and placebo were included. For prevention of severe exacerbations, combined inhaled corticosteroids and long acting β agonists as maintenance and reliever treatment and combined inhaled corticosteroids and long acting β agonists in a fixed daily dose performed equally well and were ranked first for effectiveness. The rate ratios compared with low dose inhaled corticosteroids were 0.44 (95% credible interval 0.29 to 0.66) and 0.51 (0.35 to 0.77), respectively. Other combined strategies were not superior to inhaled corticosteroids and all single drug treatments were inferior to single low dose inhaled corticosteroids. Safety was best for conventional best (guideline based) practice and combined maintenance and reliever therapy. CONCLUSIONS: Strategies with combined inhaled corticosteroids and long acting β agonists are most effective and safe in preventing severe exacerbations of asthma, although some heterogeneity was observed in this network meta-analysis of full text reports.

Original publication

DOI

10.1136/bmj.g3009

Type

Journal article

Journal

BMJ

Publication Date

13/05/2014

Volume

348

Keywords

Administration, Inhalation, Adrenal Cortex Hormones, Adrenergic beta-Agonists, Adult, Anti-Asthmatic Agents, Asthma, Chronic Disease, Comparative Effectiveness Research, Humans, Long-Term Care, Nebulizers and Vaporizers, Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic, Selection Bias