Is Clinical Remission, an Ambitious Treatment Goal, Achievable in Patients with Moderate-to-Severe Asthma on Inhaled Therapies: How Ambitious Should We Be?
Soichiro Hozawa, Risako Ito, Jodie Crawford, Ryota Hibi, Alison Moore, Stephen G. Noorduyn

TL;DR
This study evaluates whether clinical remission is achievable in Japanese patients with moderate-to-severe asthma using inhaled therapies.
Contribution
The study provides evidence on clinical remission attainability in Japanese asthma patients using three different guideline definitions.
Findings
34–59% of Japanese patients met clinical remission criteria at Week 24 using Workgroup definitions.
CR achievement varied based on definitions and thresholds used across treatment arms.
33–60% of patients achieved CR at Week 52 in a long-term safety study.
Abstract
Background/Objectives: Clinical remission (CR) is an ambitious and attainable treatment goal for asthma; however, CR definitions vary. Evidence of CR in Japanese patients with moderate-to-severe asthma on inhaled therapies is lacking and was evaluated based on three guideline definitions: the United States Workgroup consensus statement, Japanese Guidelines for adult asthma (JGL), and Practical Guidelines for Asthma Management (PGAM). Methods: Post hoc analysis of Phase III studies including Japanese participants: Japanese subpopulation of CAPTAIN (NCT02924688) and a 52-week Japanese long-term safety study (NCT03184987). CAPTAIN randomized participants to once-daily fluticasone furoate/vilanterol (FF/VI) regimens ± umeclidinium (UMEC). The long-term safety study allocated participants to once-daily FF/UMEC/VI based on asthma control status. All three CR definitions assessed systemic…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAsthma and respiratory diseases · Inhalation and Respiratory Drug Delivery · Delphi Technique in Research
