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Erdosteine enhances airway response to salbutamol in patients with mild-to-moderate COPD
Author(s) -
Roberto Dal Negro,
M. Visconti,
Fiorenza Trevisan,
Stefano Bertacco,
Claudio Micheletto,
Silvia Tognella
Publication year - 2008
Publication title -
therapeutic advances in respiratory disease
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.022
H-Index - 37
eISSN - 1753-4666
pISSN - 1753-4658
DOI - 10.1177/1753465808096109
Subject(s) - medicine , salbutamol , placebo , copd , oxidative stress , anesthesia , crossover study , antioxidant , lipid peroxidation , airway , gastroenterology , asthma , pathology , biochemistry , chemistry , alternative medicine
Background: Oxidative stress is presumed to impair β-adenoceptor function and airway patency. Erdosteine (E), a mucomodulatory compound, has shown important antioxidant properties. Methods: The objective was to assess the effect of antioxidant interventions on short-term airway response to salbutamol in non-reversible mild-to-moderate COPD patients. Thirty COPD patients (GOLD class 1—2), current smoker (≥10 pack/year), randomly received E 300 mg, N-acetylcysteine (NAC) 600 mg, or placebo, twice daily for ten days. Reversibility to salbutamol 200 μg was tested in baseline, after four and ten days of each treatment. ROS and 8-isoprostane blood levels were measured on the same days. Between-treatment comparison was performed by ANOVA and t-test or Wilcoxon test, and p<0.05 assumed. E enhanced FEV1 reversibility after four and ten days significantly (+5.1% and +5.0%; both p<0.01 vs. placebo), while NAC only showed a transient effect at day 4 (+3.0%, p<0.05), but not at day 10 (+1.3%, p = ns). Results: E and NAC caused significant drops in ROS blood levels after four and ten days (p<0.001 and p<0.0001 vs. placebo). In contrast to NAC, E lowered 8-isoprostane levels substantially for ten days (p = 0.017 and p = 0.0004 vs. placebo, respectively). Only E restored significantly short-term reversibility in COPD patients previously unresponsive to β 2 -adrenergics. Conclusions: This effect seems more related to the peculiar protection against lipid peroxidation rather than to the scavenging activity, which proves equal to that of NAC. E provides a sort of indirect bronchodilation through 're-sensitisation' of β 2 -adrenoceptors. Once confirmed in further controlled studies, it may be useful in long-term treatment of COPD.

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