SUPPLEMENT ARTICLE |
Arnold, MD
Israel E, Chervinsky PS, Friedman B, et al. J Allergy Clin Immunol. 2002;110:847854
| Purpose of the Study. |
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| Study Population. |
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15 years of age, with a
1-year history of moderate persistent asthma (baseline FEV1: 5085% of predicted values) but no controller therapy at the time of enrollment. All patients were required to have a current daily need for inhaled albuterol and documented airway reversibility of
15% at the time of entry. | Methods. |
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3 consecutive days without asthma control. An occurrence of sustained asthma control was defined as
3 consecutive days with control. Subjects completed diary cards during the 2-week, single-blind, run-in period and during the 6-week, double-blind, treatment phase. The primary measure was the percentage of days of asthma control during the treatment phase. Secondary measures included average daily albuterol use, percentages of patients with and without attacks, asthma exacerbations, occurrence of sustained asthma control, rescue corticosteroid use, and changes in FEV1 from baseline values. Clinic visits occurred every 3 weeks during the double-blind phase, and spirometry was performed at that time. | Results. |
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| Conclusions. |
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| Reviewers Comments. |
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