Steady Quiet Asthma Without Biologics: One-Year Outcomes of Single-Inhaler Triple Therapy for Severe Asthma with Small Airway Dysfunction
Vitaliano Nicola Quaranta, Francesca Montagnolo, Andrea Portacci, Silvano Dragonieri, Maria Granito, Gennaro Rociola, Santina Ferrulli, Leonardo Maselli, Giovanna Elisiana Carpagnano

TL;DR
This study shows that some severe asthma patients can avoid biologics for a year by using a single-inhaler triple therapy, with early lung function tests predicting success.
Contribution
The study identifies baseline lung function metrics that predict long-term asthma control without biologics using single-inhaler triple therapy.
Findings
9 out of 26 patients achieved Steady Quiet Asthma without needing biologics after one year.
Higher baseline Fres predicted the need for biologic therapy, while lower values correlated with successful SITT outcomes.
Patients avoiding biologics showed significant improvements in small airway function and asthma control.
Abstract
Background: Small airway dysfunction (SAD) plays a critical role in the management of severe asthma, particularly in patients at risk of requiring biological therapies (BTs). Short-term studies have shown that switching to single-inhaler triple therapy (SITT) with extrafine beclomethasone–formoterol–glycopyrronium improves outcomes and helps achieve quiet asthma, a state marked by symptom control, no exacerbations or oral steroids, reduced inflammation, and better small airway function. This study investigated whether, over one year, patients could maintain this state as Steady Quiet Asthma (SQA) and whether baseline measures could predict this sustained response. Methods: Twenty-six patients with severe asthma and SAD were transitioned from open triple-inhaler therapy to a closed, single-inhaler triple therapy containing extrafine beclomethasone–formoterol–glycopyrronium. Assessments…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAsthma and respiratory diseases · Inhalation and Respiratory Drug Delivery · Respiratory and Cough-Related Research
