PEDIATRICS Vol. 108 No. 3 September 2001, p. e48
ELECTRONIC ARTICLE:
Montelukast, a Leukotriene Receptor Antagonist, for the Treatment
of Persistent Asthma in Children Aged 2 to 5 Years
Received Sep 1, 2000; accepted Apr 23, 2001.
,
,
From the * Departments of Pulmonary-Immunology, Epidemiology,
and Biostatistics, Merck Research Laboratories, Rahway, New Jersey and
West Point, Pennsylvania; Background. The greatest prevalence
of asthma is in preschool children; however, the clinical utility of
asthma therapy for this age group is limited by a narrow therapeutic
index, long-term tolerability, and frequency and/or difficulty of
administration. Inhaled corticosteroids and inhaled cromolyn are the
most commonly prescribed controller therapies for young children with
persistent asthma, although very young patients may have difficulty
using inhalers, and dose delivery can be variable. Moreover, reduced
compliance with inhaled therapy relative to orally administered therapy
has been reported. One potential advantage of montelukast is the ease
of administering a once-daily chewable tablet; additionally, no
tachyphylaxis or change in the safety profile has been evidenced after
up to 140 and 80 weeks of montelukast therapy in adults and pediatric
patients aged 6 to 14 years, respectively. To our knowledge, this represents the first large, multicenter study to
address the effects of a leukotriene receptor antagonist in children
younger than 5 years of age with persistent asthma, as well as one of
the few asthma studies that incorporated end points validated for use
in preschool children.
Objective. Our primary objective was to determine the
safety profile of montelukast, an oral leukotriene receptor antagonist,
in preschool children with persistent asthma. Secondarily, the effect
of montelukast on exploratory measures of asthma control was also
studied.
Design and Statistical Analysis. We conducted a
double-blind, multicenter, multinational study at 93 centers worldwide:
including 56 in the United States, and 21 in countries in Africa,
Australia, Europe, North America, and South America. In this study, we
randomly assigned 689 patients (aged 2-5 years) to 12 weeks of
treatment with placebo (228 patients) or 4 mg of montelukast as a
chewable tablet (461 patients) after a 2-week placebo baseline period.
Patients had a history of physician-diagnosed asthma requiring use of
Study Participants. Of the 689 patients enrolled,
approximately 60% were boys and 60% were white. Patients were
relatively evenly divided by age: 21%, 24%, 30%, and 23% were aged
2, 3, 4, and 5 years, respectively. For 77% of the patients, asthma
symptoms first developed during the first 3 years of life. During the
placebo baseline period, patients had asthma symptoms on 6.1 days/week
and used Results. In over 12 weeks of treatment of patients aged 2 to 5 years, montelukast administered as a 4-mg chewable tablet produced
significant improvements compared with placebo in multiple parameters
of asthma control including: daytime asthma symptoms (cough, wheeze,
trouble breathing, and activity limitation); overnight asthma symptoms (cough); the percentage of days with asthma symptoms; the percentage of
days without asthma; the need for Conclusions. Oral montelukast (4-mg chewable tablet)
administered once daily is effective therapy for asthma in children
aged 2 to 5 years and is generally well tolerated without clinically
important adverse effects. Similarly, in adults and children aged 6 to
14 years, montelukast improves multiple parameters of asthma control.
Thus, this study confirms and extends the benefit of montelukast to younger children with persistent asthma.
Pediatric Pulmonary Service, Instituto de
Salud del Niño, Lima, Peru; § Paediatric Department,
Rigshospitalet, Copenhagen, Denmark;
101 Panorama Medical Clinic,
South Africa; ¶ Department of Paediatrics, Children's Hospital Medical
Centre, Perth, Australia; and # National Jewish Center for Immunology
and Respiratory Medicine, Denver, Colorado.
-agonist and a predefined level of daytime asthma symptoms.
Caregivers answered questions twice daily on a validated,
asthma-specific diary card and, at specified times during the study,
completed a validated asthma-specific quality-of-life questionnaire.
Physicians and caregivers completed a global evaluation of asthma
control at the end of the study. Efficacy end points included: daytime and overnight asthma symptoms,
daily use of
-agonist, days without asthma, frequency of asthma
attacks, number of patients discontinued because of asthma, need for
rescue medication, physician and caregiver global evaluations of
change, asthma-specific caregiver quality of life, and peripheral blood
eosinophil counts. Although exploratory, the efficacy end points were
predefined and their analyses were written in a data analysis plan
before study unblinding. At screening and at study completion, a
complete physical examination was performed. Routine laboratory tests
were drawn at screening and weeks 6 and 12, and submitted to a central
laboratory for analysis. Adverse effects were collected from caregivers
at each clinic visit. An intention-to-treat approach, including all patients with a baseline
measurement and at least 1 postrandomization measurement, was performed
for all efficacy end points. An analysis-of-variance model with terms
for treatment, study center and stratum (inhaled/nebulized corticosteroid use, cromolyn use, or none) was used to estimate treatment group means and between-group differences and to construct 95% confidence intervals. Treatment-by-age, -sex, -race,
-radioallergosorbent test, -stratum, and -study center interactions
were evaluated by including each term separately. Fisher's exact test
was used for between-group comparisons of the frequency of asthma
attacks, discontinuations from the study because of worsening asthma,
need for rescue medication, and the frequencies of adverse effects. Because of an imbalance in baseline values for eosinophil counts for
the 2 treatment groups, an analysis of covariance was performed on the
eosinophil change from baseline with the patient's baseline as
covariate.
-agonist on 6.0 days/week.
-agonist or oral corticosteroids; physician global evaluations; and peripheral blood eosinophils. The
clinical benefit of montelukast was evident within 1 day of starting
therapy. Improvements in asthma control were consistent across age,
sex, race, and study center, and whether or not patients had a positive
radioallergosorbent test. Montelukast demonstrated a consistent effect
regardless of concomitant use of inhaled/nebulized corticosteroid or
cromolyn therapy. Caregiver global evaluations, the percentage of patients experiencing
asthma attacks, and improvements in quality-of-life scores favored
montelukast, but were not significantly different from placebo.There were no clinically meaningful differences between treatment
groups in overall frequency of adverse effects or of individual adverse
effects, with the exception of asthma, which occurred significantly
more frequently in the placebo group. There were no significant
differences between treatment groups in the frequency of laboratory
adverse effects or in the frequency of elevated serum transaminase
levels. Approximately 90% of the patients completed the study.
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