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Speed of onset of action of Tilarin
Author(s) -
DONNELLY ARLENE,
BERNSTELN DAVID .,
GOLDSTEIN STANLEY,
GROSSMAN JAY,
SCHWAM HOWARD J.,
CASALE THOMAS B.
Publication year - 1996
Publication title -
allergy
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.363
H-Index - 173
eISSN - 1398-9995
pISSN - 0105-4538
DOI - 10.1111/j.1398-9995.1996.tb04774.x
Subject(s) - nedocromil sodium , medicine , placebo , nedocromil , nose , nasal spray , onset of action , anesthesia , nasal administration , surgery , pharmacology , alternative medicine , pathology
Donnelly A., Bernstein D. I., Goldstein S., Grossman J., Schwartz H. J., Casale T. B. Speed of onset of action of Tilarin. Two studies have been carried out specifically to examine the speed of onset of action of intranasal nedocromil sodium 1% (Tilarin®) for the relief of symptoms due to ragweed allergic rhinitis. One, a multicentre placebo‐controlled comparative study using a QID regimen, 1 spray per nostril, was designed to assess the speed of onset of action of nedocromil sodium during the first week of treatment in patients with rhinitis symptoms, and to evaluate the efficacy and safety of nedocromil sodium during 6 weeks of treatment (1). A 1‐week baseline, the start of which was timed to coincide with the start of the ragweed season, was followed by 6 weeks double‐blind trial treatment; only patients (n = 166) who were symptomatic at the end of baseline were included in the double‐bhd phase. Non‐parametric analyses of all variables including a summary score (stuffy nose, runny nose, itchy nose and sneezing) showed that the onset of action of nedocromil sodium occurred on the first day of treatment. Further, patients using nedocromil sodium had less symptoms during the 10 days of peak pollen, at which time physician assessment showed reduced mucosal oedema and nasal discharge, and both patient and clinician opinions favoured nedocromil sodium. No significant adverse events were reported during as 6‐week study. In the second study (2), 104 patients were randomly allocated to receive either nedocromil sodium or placebo, QID. They then spent 10 hours per day for 2 consecutive days in Iowa City Park during the peak of the ragweed season. Only patients showing significant symptoms of seasonal allergic rhinitis (SAR) during 3 hourly baseline assessments were included. Over the 2‐day period, symptom scores for stuffy nose, runny nose, itchy nose and sneezing, and global symptom summary scores, were recorded at 19 hourly time points. At home in the evening, patients recorded symptom scores for the post‐exposure period. In comparison with placebo, nedocromil sodium significantly improved rhinitis symptoms within 2 hours, and this reduction in SAR symptoms was maintained throughout the 2‐day exposure period. Post exposure symptom summary scores were also significantly lower in patients treated with nedocromil sodium than in those patients treated with placebo. Overall, very few adverse events were reported, none of them serious. In conclusion, nedocromil sodium 1% nasal spray acts rapidly, within 2 hours on the first day of treatment, to reduce ongoing symptoms of SAR. Relief of rhinitis symptoms is maintained throughout the peak pollen period with nedocromil sodium QID, which appears to be a safe and well tolerated treatment for ragweed SAR.