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REVIEW

Meta-Analysis: Respiratory Tolerance to Regular ß2-Agonist Use in Patients with Asthma

right arrow Shelley R. Salpeter, MD; Thomas M. Ormiston, MD; and Edwin E. Salpeter, PhD

18 May 2004 | Volume 140 Issue 10 | Pages 802-813

Background: The regular administration of ß2-agonists may be associated with the development of tolerance to their effects.

Purpose: To assess the effect of regular ß2-agonist use on respiratory function and ß2-receptor function in asthmatic patients.

Data Sources: Comprehensive searches of the EMBASE, MEDLINE, and CINAHL databases from 1966 to June 2003 and references of identified articles and reviews.

Study Selection: Randomized, placebo-controlled trials that studied at least 1 week of regular ß2-agonist administration in patients with asthma and did not allow "as-needed" ß2-agonist use in the placebo group.

Data Extraction: Outcomes measured in the active treatment and placebo groups were the change in FEV1 in response to treatment and subsequent ß2-agonist administration, the provocative concentration of bronchoconstrictive agents causing a 20% reduction in FEV1 (PC20), and in vitro variables of leukocyte ß2-receptor function.

Data Synthesis: Pooled results of 22 trials showed that regular ß2-agonist use, compared with placebo, did not change the mean FEV1 after treatment or the net FEV1 treatment effect but substantially reduced the following: the peak FEV1 response to subsequent ß2-agonist administration (change, –17.8% [95% CI, –27.2% to –8.5%]); the FEV1 dose response to subsequent ß2-agonists (–34.8% [CI, –45.7% to –24%]); the PC20 to combined bronchoconstrictive stimuli (–26% [CI, –37% to –11%]); and leukocyte ß2-receptor density (–18.3% [CI, –31.6% to –5.1%]), binding affinity (–23.1% [CI, –39.4% to –6.8%]), and in vitro response to isoproterenol (–32.7% [CI, –56.5% to –9.0%]).

Conclusion: Regular ß2-agonist use for at least 1 week in patients with asthma results in tolerance to the drug's bronchodilator and nonbronchodilator effects and may be associated with poorer disease control compared with placebo.


Editors' Notes
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Context

  • Although ß2-agonists are an important component of asthma therapy, studies indicate that tachyphylaxis may make regular use of these agents counterproductive.

Contribution

  • Pooled data from 22 trials of regular ß2-agonist use versus placebo showed that regular use leads to decreased responsiveness to both the bronchodilator and nonbronchodilator effects of subsequent ß2-agonist administration and increased airway inflammation.

Implications

  • Patients with asthma who use ß2-agonists regularly may not respond to subsequent doses of ß2-agonists as well as do patients who had not previously been using these agents, and they may have increased airway inflammation compared with those not taking the medicine at all.

–The Editors

 

Author and Article Information
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From Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, and Santa Clara Valley Medical Center, San Jose, California; and Cornell University, Ithaca, New York.

Acknowledgments: The authors thank Donald Miller for graphical assistance and Christopher Stave for coordinating the trials search.

Potential Financial Conflicts of Interest: None disclosed.

Requests for Single Reprints: Shelley R. Salpeter, MD, Santa Clara Valley Medical Center, 751 S. Bascom Avenue, San Jose, CA 95128; e-mail, salpeter{at}stanford.edu.

Current Author Addresses: Drs. S.R. Salpeter and Ormiston: Santa Clara Valley Medical Center, 751 S. Bascom Avenue, San Jose, CA 95128.

Dr. E. Salpeter: Center for Radiophysics and Space Research, 612 Space Sciences Building, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY 14853.


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Summaries for Patients
Tolerance to Beta2-Agonist Treatment after Regular Use in People with Asthma
Annals 2004 140: I-41. [Full Text]  



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