Inhaled aztreonam lysine vs. inhaled tobramycin in cystic fibrosis: a comparative efficacy trial.
Publication/Presentation Date
3-1-2013
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Open-label, parallel-group, international trial comparing aztreonam for inhalation solution (AZLI) and tobramycin nebulizer solution (TNS) for cystic fibrosis patients with airway Pseudomonas aeruginosa.
METHODS: 273 patients (≥ 6 years); randomized to three 28-day courses (AZLI 75 mg [three-times/day] or TNS 300 mg [twice/day]); 28 off-days separated each course.
RESULTS: 268 patients were treated (AZLI/TNS: 136/132). Mean baseline FEV1 was 52% predicted. Mean relative changes after 1 course (AZLI: 8.35%; TNS: 0.55%; p< 0.001) and mean actual changes across 3 courses (AZLI: 2.05%; TNS: -0.66%; p=0.002) indicated AZLI statistical superiority vs. TNS. AZLI-treated patients had fewer respiratory hospitalizations (p=0.044) and respiratory events requiring additional antipseudomonal antibiotics (p=0.004); both treatments were well tolerated. 133 patients received 1 to 3 courses of AZLI treatment in the open-label extension-period (28-day courses separated by 28 days off-treatment); lung function improvements were comparable regardless of whether patients had received TNS or AZLI in the preceding comparative period.
CONCLUSIONS: AZLI demonstrated statistical superiority in lung function and a reduction in acute pulmonary exacerbations compared to TNS over 3 treatment courses (ClinicalTrials.gov: NCT00757237).
Volume
12
Issue
2
First Page
130
Last Page
140
ISSN
1873-5010
Published In/Presented At
Assael, B. M., Pressler, T., Bilton, D., Fayon, M., Fischer, R., Chiron, R., LaRosa, M., Knoop, C., McElvaney, N., Lewis, S. A., Bresnik, M., Montgomery, A. B., Oermann, C. M., & AZLI Active Comparator Study Group (2013). Inhaled aztreonam lysine vs. inhaled tobramycin in cystic fibrosis: a comparative efficacy trial. Journal of cystic fibrosis : official journal of the European Cystic Fibrosis Society, 12(2), 130–140. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jcf.2012.07.006
Disciplines
Medicine and Health Sciences
PubMedID
22985692
Department(s)
Department of Medicine
Document Type
Article