Advair

NoExcuses

New member
This just came out over the weekend.

A fantastic alternative to Advair is Flovent and Albuterol combo, neither of which have this strong warning.



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<b>Asthma Drug Warning Strengthened</b>

A strict new warning may impact sales of one of the world's top-selling asthma drugs.

GlaxoSmithKline (nyse: GSK - news - people ) said today it had reached an agreement to update its product label for its popular drug Advair with a strict new warning that advises doctors to limit the use of the drug only to patients who are not controlled on other asthma drugs, or have such severe cases.

The agreement comes in the wake of a giant 26,000 patient study, completed several years ago, that found a higher death rate in patients treated with salmeterol, one of the ingredients in Advair. The death data were already in the label in a black-box warning, but now the label also includes specific admonishments to doctors to restrict use of the powerful combination asthma drug to patients who really need it.

"almeterol] one of the active ingredients in ADVAIR DISKUS may increase the risk of asthma-related death. Therefore, when treating patients with asthma, physicians should only prescribe ADVAIR DISKUS for patients not adequately controlled on other asthma controller medications?or whose disease severity clearly warrants initiation of treatments with two maintenance therapies," the new label says. Advair contains two medicines, an inhaled steroid to control inflammation, and salmeterol, which improves symptoms by expanding the airways. There also is a new label for Glaxo's Serevent, which just contains salmeterol.

GlaxoSmithKline "is pleased to have reached an agreement with [the] Food and Drug Administration on product labeling that is in the best interest of patients," the company said in a statement.

The agreement, however, appears to represent a partial victory for the FDA, which issued a public healthy advisory last November warning that use of the drug should be limited. At the time, GlaxoSmithKline said that it disagreed with the proposed label change.

Exactly how the new label will impact sales of Advair is not clear. Since the FDA's advisory last fall, Advair sales have continued to grow strongly. However, the new warning makes it official: doctors who use Advair as initial therapy in relatively mild cases would be using the drug off-label. Earlier this year, a GlaxoSmithKline executive insisted to analysts that any downside to a new label was limited since only 6% of Advair use is among patients not previously on asthma medication.

<a target=new class=ftalternatingbarlinklarge href="http://www.forbes.com/2006/03/03/glaxosmithkline-advair-0303markets16.html?partner=yahootix">http://www.forbes.com/2006/03/03/glaxosmithkline-advair-0303markets16.html?partner=yahootix</a>
 

NoExcuses

New member
This just came out over the weekend.

A fantastic alternative to Advair is Flovent and Albuterol combo, neither of which have this strong warning.



-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<b>Asthma Drug Warning Strengthened</b>

A strict new warning may impact sales of one of the world's top-selling asthma drugs.

GlaxoSmithKline (nyse: GSK - news - people ) said today it had reached an agreement to update its product label for its popular drug Advair with a strict new warning that advises doctors to limit the use of the drug only to patients who are not controlled on other asthma drugs, or have such severe cases.

The agreement comes in the wake of a giant 26,000 patient study, completed several years ago, that found a higher death rate in patients treated with salmeterol, one of the ingredients in Advair. The death data were already in the label in a black-box warning, but now the label also includes specific admonishments to doctors to restrict use of the powerful combination asthma drug to patients who really need it.

"almeterol] one of the active ingredients in ADVAIR DISKUS may increase the risk of asthma-related death. Therefore, when treating patients with asthma, physicians should only prescribe ADVAIR DISKUS for patients not adequately controlled on other asthma controller medications?or whose disease severity clearly warrants initiation of treatments with two maintenance therapies," the new label says. Advair contains two medicines, an inhaled steroid to control inflammation, and salmeterol, which improves symptoms by expanding the airways. There also is a new label for Glaxo's Serevent, which just contains salmeterol.

GlaxoSmithKline "is pleased to have reached an agreement with [the] Food and Drug Administration on product labeling that is in the best interest of patients," the company said in a statement.

The agreement, however, appears to represent a partial victory for the FDA, which issued a public healthy advisory last November warning that use of the drug should be limited. At the time, GlaxoSmithKline said that it disagreed with the proposed label change.

Exactly how the new label will impact sales of Advair is not clear. Since the FDA's advisory last fall, Advair sales have continued to grow strongly. However, the new warning makes it official: doctors who use Advair as initial therapy in relatively mild cases would be using the drug off-label. Earlier this year, a GlaxoSmithKline executive insisted to analysts that any downside to a new label was limited since only 6% of Advair use is among patients not previously on asthma medication.

<a target=new class=ftalternatingbarlinklarge href="http://www.forbes.com/2006/03/03/glaxosmithkline-advair-0303markets16.html?partner=yahootix">http://www.forbes.com/2006/03/03/glaxosmithkline-advair-0303markets16.html?partner=yahootix</a>
 

NoExcuses

New member
I figure the more informed we all are, the better decisions we can make. <img src="i/expressions/face-icon-small-smile.gif" border="0">
 

NoExcuses

New member
I figure the more informed we all are, the better decisions we can make. <img src="i/expressions/face-icon-small-smile.gif" border="0">
 

LouLou

New member
Amy and others,

Are you on Advair? I am. Do you think you'll go off of it after this? Do you feel it makes a big difference in your health?
 

LouLou

New member
Amy and others,

Are you on Advair? I am. Do you think you'll go off of it after this? Do you feel it makes a big difference in your health?
 

anonymous

New member
I'm actually not on Advair. But I do take a component of Advair, which is Fluticasone (Flovent).

People have different opinions on this, but my doc and I are of the opinion that using both Advair and albuterol is redundant. Advair contains a steroid, fluticasone, and a bronchodilator, serevent (aka salmeterol). Using two bronchodilators doesn't have twice the effect - if your airways are open from taking Advair, they're not going to open more with albuterol (if you use them at the same time). However, if you space their use 3 hours apart, it can have some use.

So I take just Flovent (fluticasone) and albuterol, a bronchodilator in the same class as salmeterol. Albuterol doesn't have the same black box warning as salmeterol, however.

My feeling is this - the more info we all have about what we take and our disease, the better decisions we can make with our docs. I wouldn't go off Advair on my own without 1st talking with my doc.

And each body is different - if Advair does wonders for you, I would stay on it. The risk may be tiny compared to the enormous benefits.

As you all know, a lot of our other meds can have horrendous side effects - take our antibiotics for example. But many of us dont' ever experience them, like we might not with Advair.

I don't think that this is a black and white issue - gotta take all the factors and make a personal decision.
 

anonymous

New member
I'm actually not on Advair. But I do take a component of Advair, which is Fluticasone (Flovent).

People have different opinions on this, but my doc and I are of the opinion that using both Advair and albuterol is redundant. Advair contains a steroid, fluticasone, and a bronchodilator, serevent (aka salmeterol). Using two bronchodilators doesn't have twice the effect - if your airways are open from taking Advair, they're not going to open more with albuterol (if you use them at the same time). However, if you space their use 3 hours apart, it can have some use.

So I take just Flovent (fluticasone) and albuterol, a bronchodilator in the same class as salmeterol. Albuterol doesn't have the same black box warning as salmeterol, however.

My feeling is this - the more info we all have about what we take and our disease, the better decisions we can make with our docs. I wouldn't go off Advair on my own without 1st talking with my doc.

And each body is different - if Advair does wonders for you, I would stay on it. The risk may be tiny compared to the enormous benefits.

As you all know, a lot of our other meds can have horrendous side effects - take our antibiotics for example. But many of us dont' ever experience them, like we might not with Advair.

I don't think that this is a black and white issue - gotta take all the factors and make a personal decision.
 

Diane

New member
I've been on Advair for a bit over a year now. I am always nervous when inhaling medicines since i have ongoing hemoptysis issues. The Advair has helped me a lot, but all these new warnings always scare me a bit. I am trying to convince myself that if someone was going to have a horrible reaction to a medicine it would be right off the bat, not a year later. I hope i'm right. I will ask my doctor about this....................
 

Diane

New member
I've been on Advair for a bit over a year now. I am always nervous when inhaling medicines since i have ongoing hemoptysis issues. The Advair has helped me a lot, but all these new warnings always scare me a bit. I am trying to convince myself that if someone was going to have a horrible reaction to a medicine it would be right off the bat, not a year later. I hope i'm right. I will ask my doctor about this....................
 

NoExcuses

New member
I dont' know how many of you all remember the sister models Niki and Krissy Taylor? They looked almost like twins but they were a few years apart.

Krissy had asthma and took salmeterol (Serevent). She had an attack and died - coroner linked it to Serevent.

Again, probably a rare occurance but something to keep in mind.
 

NoExcuses

New member
I dont' know how many of you all remember the sister models Niki and Krissy Taylor? They looked almost like twins but they were a few years apart.

Krissy had asthma and took salmeterol (Serevent). She had an attack and died - coroner linked it to Serevent.

Again, probably a rare occurance but something to keep in mind.
 

princessjdc

New member
I take Advair discus, and I'll stay on it as long as the doctor keeps me on it, if he feels I need to be off of it, and thinks something else will be better or just dont want me on it, then I wont take it, other than that, I stay on it.
 

princessjdc

New member
I take Advair discus, and I'll stay on it as long as the doctor keeps me on it, if he feels I need to be off of it, and thinks something else will be better or just dont want me on it, then I wont take it, other than that, I stay on it.
 
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