Management of Asthma in School-age Children on Therapy

Overview[ - collapse ][ - ]

Purpose Asthma affects 1 in 8 children in the UK. Up to half of these are treated with preventative medicine in the form of low-dose steroids using an inhaler. The National Asthma Treatment Guidelines recommend when this treatment is not working other treatments are started. Studies to support this have taken place in adults but not with children. If patients are instructed how to use inhalers and are given information about asthma, they can control their disease much better. The first part of this study, lasting 4 weeks, will make sure the children and their families understand how to use their inhaler. All children will be given the same steroid inhaler to use and after 4 weeks those still with symptoms will enter the study proper which lasts for 48 weeks. During this part of the study the children will be given one of three treatments. These are:- a steroid inhaler + a dummy tablet, an inhaler containing a steroid and a long-acting reliever + a dummy tablet or a steroid inhaler + an active tablet. In this way the patient, the family and the researchers will not know which of the three treatments the child is taking until the code is broken at the end of the study. What matters to children is how they feel, are they able to run around and play with friends and are they well enough to go to school. The investigators will assess which of the above treatments best allow these to happen by asking the parents and children to fill in questionnaires on 4 occasions during the study. The investigators will also see which treatment best prevents the need for short courses of steroids tablets during the study. These are commonly given when asthma symptoms worsen. Most children will be started in the study through their general practitioner clinic. It will take one year to enroll all 900 children. Once enrolled the children will be followed-up in hospital centres. Much of the funding will be required to recruit and follow-up the children, train everyone to the same standard and develop and administer the questionnaires and health economic assessments. Asthma care is an expensive. The investigators will look at the costs and assess which treatment offers most benefit. The team has experience and ability in this field and will ensure the results are well publicised. Any child can withdraw from the study at any time.
ConditionAsthma
InterventionDrug: inhaled fluticasone propionate
Drug: salmeterol
Drug: Montelukast
PhasePhase 4
SponsorProfessor Warren Lenney
Responsible PartyUniversity Hospital of North Staffordshire
ClinicalTrials.gov IdentifierNCT01526161
First ReceivedAugust 10, 2011
Last UpdatedFebruary 2, 2012
Last verifiedJanuary 2012

Tracking Information[ + expand ][ + ]

First Received DateAugust 10, 2011
Last Updated DateFebruary 2, 2012
Start DateApril 2009
Estimated Primary Completion DateJanuary 2011
Current Primary Outcome MeasuresNumber of asthma exacerbations requiring treatment with short courses of oral corticosteroids over 48 weeks from date of randomisation [Time Frame: Between 2008 and 2010 for 48 weeks duration] [Designated as safety issue: Yes]
Current Secondary Outcome Measures
  • Quality of Life as measured by the Paediatric Asthma Quality of Life Questionnaire (PAQLQ) and the Paediatric Asthma Caregivers Quality of Life Questionnaire (PACQLQ) [Time Frame: Between 2008 and 2010 for 48 weeks duration] [Designated as safety issue: Yes]
  • Time from randomisation to first exacerbation requiring treatment with a short course of oral corticosteroids [Time Frame: Between 2008 and 2010 for 48 weeks duration] [Designated as safety issue: Yes]
  • School attendance [Time Frame: Between 2008 and 2010 for 48 weeks duration] [Designated as safety issue: Yes]
  • Hospital admissions [Time Frame: Between 2008 and 2010 for 48 weeks duration] [Designated as safety issue: Yes]
  • Amount of rescue beta2 agonist therapy prescribed [Time Frame: Between 2008 and 2010 for 48 weeks duration] [Designated as safety issue: Yes]
  • Time from randomisation to treatment withdrawal (due to lack of efficacy or side effects) [Time Frame: Between 2008 and 2010 for 48 weeks duration] [Designated as safety issue: Yes]
  • Lung function at 48 weeks (as assessed by spirometry) [Time Frame: Between 2008 and 2010 for 48 weeks duration] [Designated as safety issue: Yes]
  • Cost effectiveness [Time Frame: Between 2008 and 2010 for 48 weeks duration] [Designated as safety issue: Yes]
  • Adverse Events [Time Frame: Between 2008 and 2010 for 48 weeks duration] [Designated as safety issue: Yes]

Descriptive Information[ + expand ][ + ]

Brief TitleManagement of Asthma in School-age Children on Therapy
Official TitleManagement of Asthma in School-age Children on Therapy
Brief Summary
Asthma affects 1 in 8 children in the UK. Up to half of these are treated with preventative
medicine in the form of low-dose steroids using an inhaler. The National Asthma Treatment
Guidelines recommend when this treatment is not working other treatments are started.
Studies to support this have taken place in adults but not with children. If patients are
instructed how to use inhalers and are given information about asthma, they can control
their disease much better. The first part of this study, lasting 4 weeks, will make sure the
children and their families understand how to use their inhaler. All children will be given
the same steroid inhaler to use and after 4 weeks those still with symptoms will enter the
study proper which lasts for 48 weeks. During this part of the study the children will be
given one of three treatments. These are:- a steroid inhaler + a dummy tablet, an inhaler
containing a steroid and a long-acting reliever + a dummy tablet or a steroid inhaler + an
active tablet. In this way the patient, the family and the researchers will not know which
of the three treatments the child is taking until the code is broken at the end of the
study.

What matters to children is how they feel, are they able to run around and play with friends
and are they well enough to go to school. The investigators will assess which of the above
treatments best allow these to happen by asking the parents and children to fill in
questionnaires on 4 occasions during the study. The investigators will also see which
treatment best prevents the need for short courses of steroids tablets during the study.
These are commonly given when asthma symptoms worsen.

Most children will be started in the study through their general practitioner clinic. It
will take one year to enroll all 900 children. Once enrolled the children will be
followed-up in hospital centres. Much of the funding will be required to recruit and
follow-up the children, train everyone to the same standard and develop and administer the
questionnaires and health economic assessments. Asthma care is an expensive. The
investigators will look at the costs and assess which treatment offers most benefit. The
team has experience and ability in this field and will ensure the results are well
publicised. Any child can withdraw from the study at any time.
Detailed Description
Asthma remains the most common medical condition seen in children in primary care and the
most frequent cause for medical paediatric hospital admission. It affects 1 in 8 children
nationwide, approximately 50% of whom are prescribed low-dose inhaled corticosteroids (ICS).
When treatment with low-dose ICS fails to control asthma symptoms, the National Guidelines
suggest ensuring compliance, maximising inhaler technique and giving appropriate information
about the disease to children and their families. Once these measures have been established
and if asthma symptoms persist, the Guidelines recommend changing the treatment (Step 3 of
the National Guidelines). The evidence at this step of the Guidelines is much weaker in
children than it is in adults. The reasons for this are that few studies have been
undertaken in children and most that have taken place have used adult-based outcomes such as
lung function measurements. This is unsatisfactory because we know that as a chronic disease
entity asthma in children is much more variable than in adults and between periods of
symptoms, lung function is often normal. Pharmaceutical company studies have really only
been conducted as part of their requirements to obtain a license to market their product.
These studies have generally been of short-term duration. They have not added to clinicians'
understanding of how and where to use the medications. They have not necessarily selected a
representative population due to their entry criteria and their intensive study
requirements. Such requirements mean that "real-life‟ compliance does not occur. In the
independent National Dutch Study which attempted to enter patients uncontrolled on low-dose
ICS, three treatment groups were employed: inhaled corticosteroids alone, inhaled
corticosteroids in double the dose and inhaled corticosteroids + a long-acting beta2
agonist. There was essentially no difference in outcome measures between the three treatment
groups as once again the primary outcome measure was that of lung function (FEV1). Comparing
this study with a similar adult study6 both of which used lung function as the primary
outcome measure, the mean FEV1 on entry into the paediatric study was approximately 89%
expected for the children‟s heights. In the adult study the mean FEV1 on entry into the
study was 74% expected. It is therefore not surprising that the paediatric study was unable
to show any differences between the treatment groups.

We do not have the scientific information about how to treat children with asthma who are
not well controlled on low-dose ICS therapy. It used to be recommended that when low-dose
ICS were not effective their dose should be doubled. Studies in children, however, have
investigated this statement and the results are not impressive7 . There is no scientific
evidence that when control is poor in children with asthma, the dose of the inhaled steroid
should be increased. We have therefore decided not to introduce into this study a treatment
limb with a higher ICS dosage. There is anecdotal information, however, from many studies
undertaken within the pharmaceutical industry that when children enter a study which is
controlled and double-blind in nature, up to 30% of them improve, their symptoms reduce and
their lung function increases8. It is therefore surprising that approximately one third of
children receiving ICS are prescribed high-dose inhaled steroid therapy (≥ 800micrograms and
unlicensed beclometasone dipropionate or equivalent) or they are commenced on "add-on‟
therapies such as long-acting beta2 agonists (LABA) or leukotriene receptor antagonists
(LTRA) in addition to low-dose ICS. Concerns about the safety of high-dose ICS have been
raised in relation to growth impairment9, hypoglycaemia10 and suppression of the adrenal
cortex11 resulting in warnings on prescribing from the Medicines & Healthcare Products
Regulatory Agency (MHRA) in the UK12 and from the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) in the
USA. It is therefore unacceptable that approximately one third of children with asthma are
being treated with the above regimes. Asthma is a very common condition and the worth of
these regimes has not been proven by appropriately devised paediatric studies. The National
Guidelines have been developed in a "stepwise‟ manner, the amount of medication increasing
at each step if symptoms are not controlled.

However, as stated above, it may be that childhood asthma differs from that in adults. It
seems that relatively poorly controlled asthma in children who exhibit frequent symptoms do
not necessarily show abnormal lung function between their periods of symptoms. It is for
this reason that in our study we will be concentrating on outcome measures such as
exacerbations and quality of life although we will have the opportunity to measure
spirometric values at the first (T0) and last (T48) visits in the randomised part of the
study. It could be that an increase in medication may only be needed for a short time in
children with asthma and there have been suggestions that once control is achieved children
should have their add-on therapy reviewed. To incorporate such a step within the present
study would make it excessively complicated and would have major implications on the number
of patients included. The inclusion of such a step would make the study impractical within
the UK. A study is needed which is simple, pragmatic (but placebo-controlled and
double-blinded), has outcomes which will be of practical benefit to children and will
provide evidence for the use of add-on medications in the most cost effective and efficient
way. Children dislike exacerbations. School attendance, daily activity and general
well-being increase when asthma is well controlled. Once families understand sufficiently
about asthma, inhaler technique has been evaluated and optimised, and compliance issues
addressed, one of the reasons why a specific medication may be less effective could be
related to the genetic make-up of the patient. In this study we will have the opportunity,
through a separate consent process, to collect and store DNA specimens from saliva for later
analysis of specific genetic polymorphisms in relation to asthma severity and outcome. This
aspect will bring added value to the study.
Study TypeInterventional
Study PhasePhase 4
Study DesignAllocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Safety/Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Double Blind (Subject, Caregiver, Investigator), Primary Purpose: Treatment
ConditionAsthma
InterventionDrug: inhaled fluticasone propionate
100 micrograms
Drug: salmeterol
50 m
Drug: Montelukast
Double blind double dummy
Study Arm (s)
  • Experimental: Inhaled Fluticasone propionate and salmeterol
    inhaled fluticasone propionate 100 micrograms and salmeterol 50 m
  • Active Comparator: Inhaled Fluticasone propionate and placebo
    inhaled fluticasone propionate 100micrograms twice daily + placebo
  • Active Comparator: Inhaled Fluticasone propionate and Montelukast
    inhaled fluticasone propionate 100micrograms twice daily + Montelukast

Recruitment Information[ + expand ][ + ]

Recruitment StatusCompleted
Estimated Enrollment229
Estimated Completion DateJanuary 2011
Estimated Primary Completion DateJune 2010
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria:

- Children with physician diagnosed asthma aged 6 years -14 years, 11months

- Those requiring frequent short-acting beta2 agonist relief therapy ≥ 7 puffs in the
past seven days

- Those with symptoms of asthma (i.e. wheeze, shortness of breath but not cough alone)
resulting in:

i. Nocturnal wakening in the last week because of asthma symptoms and/or ii. Asthma
has interfered with usual activities in the last week and/or iii. Those who have had
exacerbations, defined as a short course of oral corticosteroids, an unscheduled GP
or A&E Department visit or a hospital admission within the previous 6 months

- Fully informed written (proxy) consent and assent, where appropriate

Exclusion Criteria:

- Children receiving long acting beta2-agonists, leukotriene receptor antagonists,
regular theophylline therapy or high dose ICS >1000micrograms and unlicensed
beclometasone dipropionate or equivalent (at the discretion of the investigator)

- Children with other respiratory diseases, cystic fibrosis, cardiac disease or
immunological disorders

- Non-English speaking
GenderBoth
Ages6 Years
Accepts Healthy VolunteersNo
ContactsNot Provided
Location CountriesNot Provided

Administrative Information[ + expand ][ + ]

NCT Number NCT01526161
Other Study ID NumbersHTA 05/503/04
Has Data Monitoring CommitteeYes
Information Provided ByUniversity Hospital of North Staffordshire
Study SponsorProfessor Warren Lenney
CollaboratorsNot Provided
Investigators Principal Investigator: Warren Lenney University Hospital of North Staffordshire
Verification DateJanuary 2012