Exacerbation Reduction in Patients with Asthma Following Escalation to FF/UMEC/VI from ICS/LABA: Retrospective Cohort Study

Document Type

Article

Publication Date

12-1-2025

Publication Title

Pulm Ther

Keywords

Asthma, clinical practice; FF/UMEC/VI; Real-world evidence; Single-inhaler triple therapy; United States

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Despite fluticasone furoate/umeclidinium/vilanterol (FF/UMEC/VI) being available for asthma treatment in the US (United states) since 2020, real-world evidence on its clinical and economic benefits in patients with asthma is lacking. This study aimed to assess the effectiveness of FF/UMEC/VI (100/62.5/25 µg and 200/62.5/25 µg) in US patients with asthma previously on inhaled corticosteroid/long-acting β(2)-agonists (ICS/LABA) using administrative claims data.

METHODS: Retrospective, longitudinal, pre-post study utilizing data from the Komodo Health database between 09/09/2019 and 12/31/2023. Eligible adults with asthma had been treated with ICS/LABA prior to FF/UMEC/VI initiation (index date: first FF/UMEC/VI prescription). Rates of moderate-severe exacerbations, asthma-related healthcare resource utilization, oral corticosteroid (OCS) and short-acting β(2)-agonist (SABA) use, and asthma-related medical costs were evaluated pre- (12 months pre-index) and post-FF/UMEC/VI initiation (12 months post-index). Statistical analyses involved rate ratios (RRs) from a Poisson regression model, odds ratios (ORs) from logistic regression models, and mean differences from linear regression models. Exploratory analyses stratified these results by pre-index ICS/LABA combination and FF/UMEC/VI index dose.

RESULTS: In total, 17,959 patients were included. Following FF/UMEC/VI initiation, odds of having ≥ 1 exacerbation were reduced by 52% (OR [95% confidence interval (CI)] 0.48 [0.46, 0.50]; P <  0.001), rate of moderate-severe exacerbations reduced by 38% (RR [95% CI] 0.62 [0.61, 0.64]; P <  0.001) and asthma-related hospitalizations by 25% (RR [95% CI] 0.75 [0.68, 0.83]; P <  0.001). Odds of ≥ 1 OCS dispensing were reduced by 36% (OR [95% CI] 0.64 [0.62, 0.67]; P <  0.001) and ≥ 1 SABA canister use by 54% (OR [95% CI]: 0.46 [0.44, 0.48]; P <  0.001) post initiation; mean annualized asthma-related medical costs were reduced by $1115 ([95% CI] [$ -1771, $ -459]; P <  0.001). Both FF/UMEC/VI dosage groups had similar results.

CONCLUSIONS: In patients who remain uncontrolled despite ICS/LABA treatment, escalating to FF/UMEC/VI is associated with reductions in asthma exacerbations, asthma-related hospitalizations, OCS use, SABA use, and asthma-related medical costs.

PubMed ID

41148557

ePublication

ePub ahead of print

Volume

11

Issue

4

First Page

725

Last Page

740

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