Artigo Acesso aberto Revisado por pares

The Salford Lung Study protocol: a pragmatic, randomised phase III real-world effectiveness trial in asthma

2015; BioMed Central; Volume: 15; Issue: 1 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1186/s12890-015-0150-8

ISSN

1471-2466

Autores

Ashley Woodcock, Nawar Diar Bakerly, John P. New, Martin Gibson, Wei Wu, Jørgen Vestbo, David Leather,

Tópico(s)

Respiratory and Cough-Related Research

Resumo

Novel therapies need to be evaluated in normal clinical practice to allow a true representation of the treatment effectiveness in real-world settings. The Salford Lung Study is a pragmatic randomised controlled trial in adult asthma, evaluating the clinical effectiveness and safety of once-daily fluticasone furoate (100 μg or 200 μg)/vilanterol 25 μg in a novel dry-powder inhaler, versus existing asthma maintenance therapy. The study was initiated before this investigational treatment was licensed and conducted in real-world clinical practice to consider adherence, co-morbidities, polypharmacy, and real-world factors. Primary endpoint: Asthma Control Test at week 24; safety endpoints include the incidence of serious pneumonias. The study utilises the Salford electronic medical record, which allows near to real-time collection and monitoring of safety data. The Salford Lung Study is the world's first pragmatic randomised controlled trial of a pre-licensed medication in asthma. Use of patients' linked electronic health records to collect clinical endpoints offers minimal disruption to patients and investigators, and also ensures patient safety. This highly innovative study will complement standard double-blind randomised controlled trials in order to improve our understanding of the risk/benefit profile of fluticasone furoate/vilanterol in patients with asthma in real-world settings. Clinicaltrials.gov, NCT01706198 ; 04 October 2012.

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