Global Initiative for Asthma (GINA) What’s new in GINA 2015?

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
GOLD MANAGEMENT PLAN FOR CHRONIC OBSTRUCTIVE PULMONARY DISEASE (COPD)
Advertisements

Use of Medications in Asthma Cyril Grum, M.D. Department of Internal Medicine *Based on the University of Michigan Guidelines for Clinic Care and the National.
2012 UPDATE. What guidelines do we have available to follow for asthma 1) Asthma GP monitoring Guideline 2) Asthma Diagnosis Guideline 3) Acute asthma.
1 Paediatric asthma The British Thoracic Society Scottish Intercollegiate Guidelines Network Thorax 2003; 58 (Suppl I): i1-i92.
Paediatric asthma Thorax 2003; 58 (Suppl I): i1-i92.
Global Initiative for Asthma (GINA) Teaching slide set 2015 update
Acute severe asthma.
Asthma Diagnosis Prescribing Acute Management Tracey Bradshaw Respiratory Consultant RIE.
M.E.D.C Sezione di Pneumologia ed Allergologia, U.O. Pediatria 1 Azienda Ospedaliero-Universitaria Pisana, Pisa.
Drugs For Treating Asthma
DIFFICULT TO TREAT ASTHMA By PROF. RAMADAN M. NAFAE PROFESSOR AND HEAD OF CHEST DEPARTMENT FACULTY OF MEDICINE ZAGAZIG UNIVERSITY.
Managing asthma & Inhaler devices for respiratory disease.
Inhaler technique is it important?. Compton et al (2006) Review of evidence from 6 European countries ( Spain, Italy, France, Germany, Netherlands, UK)
Triage Nurse Initiation of Corticosteroids in Paediatric Asthma is Associated With Improved Emergency Department Efficiency Zemak et al Pediatrics Volume.
1 British Guideline on the Management of Asthma BTS/SIGN British Guideline on the Management of Asthma, May 2008 Introduction Diagnosis Non-pharmacological.
Respiratory illness in children asthma standards of care
Paediatric Asthma Maria Tracey Paediatric Pharmacist Jane Davis Paediatric Clinical Nurse Specialist CF/Respiratory Royal Alexandra Hospital Paisley.
Asthma Management Fine Tuning  Maximum control with minimum medication  Start with mild asthma and work up the scale (BTS/SIGN 2004)
Pharmaceutical Care in Asthma Omotola Morakinyo
MANAGEMENT OF ASTHMA 6 Penaflor, Dominic Quinto, Milraam Ramos,Josefa Victoria Sicat, Gracie Suaco, David Tio- Cuizon, Jeremiah Valenzuela, Virginia Lou.
Anticholinergics in COPD presented by: Soha Ragab Moselhy group 2.
Assessing Control & Adjusting Therapy in Youths > 12 Years of Age & Adults *ACQ values of 0.76–1.4 are indeterminate regarding well-controlled asthma.
GOLD Update 2011 Rabab A. El Wahsh, MD. Lecturer of Chest Diseases and Tuberculosis Minoufiya University REVISED 2011.
Component 4 Medications.
Exacerbations. Exacerbations An exacerbation of COPD is an acute event characterized by a worsening of the patient’s respiratory symptoms that is beyond.
P RACTICAL ISSUES IN L ONG T REM M ANAGEMENT OF A STHMA DESPITE REGULAR FOLLOW UP Dr kondekar Santosh TN Medical college Mumbai
Classification of Chronic Asthma Severity on Treatment Domains/EstimatesIntermittentPersistent Mild to Moderate Severe** Daytime symptoms MonthlyWeeklyDaily.
Component 4 Medications. Key Points - Medications  2 general classes: – Long-term control medications – Quick-Relief medications  Controller medications:
History Taking Zinc code: UKACL1878ea Date of preparation May 2015 AstraZeneca provided funding & reviewed for technical accuracy.
ASTHMA MANAGEMENT AND PREVENTION PREFACE Asthma affects an estimated 300 million individuals worldwide. Serious global health problem affecting all age.
An Update in Pediatric Asthma DR.NUFOUD AL- SHAMMARI CONSULTANT PEDIATRIC PULMONOLOGIST CHAIRPERSON OF MUBARK AL-KABEER HOSPITAL KUWAIT.
Definition of asthma Asthma is a heterogeneous disease, usually characterized by chronic airway inflammation. It is defined by the history of respiratory.
© Global Initiative for Asthma GINA Global Strategy for Asthma Management and Prevention 2015 This slide set is restricted for academic and educational.
Wendy Pigg Practice support Pharmacist/Independent Prescriber
Areas to cover Analysis of information Recruitment Review.
Overview of Changes to the NAEP Asthma Guidelines Breathe California’s Clinical Asthma Collaborative Susan M. Pollart, MD, MS University of Virginia Family.
Respiratory medication use in Australia 2003–2013: Treatment of asthma and COPD AIHW: Correll PK, Poulos LM, Ampon R, Reddel HK and Marks GB. Published.
LSU Journal Club Withdrawal of Inhaled Glucocorticoids and Exacerbations of COPD WISDOM study H. Magnussen MD, et al. Nisha Loganantharaj, PGY1 April 21,
Prescribing for patients with COPD Evidence Update Emma Blanden- Pharmacist.
Management of stable chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (2) Seminar Training Primary Care Asthma + COPD D.Anan Esmail.
PICH Childhood Asthma project Bina Chauhan Locum GP 4/5/16.
AGGIORNAMENTO SULLA GESTIONE ATTUALE DELLA TERAPIA DELL’ASMA Pierluigi Paggiaro GINA International Executive Committee, Chairman GINA ITaly Cardio-Thoracic.
What doctors should do to support patients with uncontrolled and severe asthma. Jaime Correia de Sousa Ioanna Tsiligianni Anders Østrem.
Jessica Case study.
Respiratory disorders
Global Initiative for Asthma (GINA) Teaching slide set 2017 update
Research where it is most needed National Respiratory Strategy
Asthma: In my practice Bangladesh Dr GM Monsur Habib.
Bob Case study.
The Modern Management of Asthma: Getting it right
Asthma Yardstick Annals of Allergy, Asthma & Immunology
Copyright © 2015 by the American Osteopathic Association.
Monitoring asthma in primary care
Patterns of asthma medications prescriptions among adult patients in the chest and accident and emergency units of a tertiary health care facility in Uganda.
Global Initiative for Asthma (GINA) What’s new in GINA 2015?
A stepwise therapeutic approach in severe uncontrolled asthmatic subjects. A stepwise therapeutic approach in severe uncontrolled asthmatic subjects. GINA:
The Role of Anticholinergic Therapy in Moderate to Severe Asthma
The Role of the Primary Care Physician in Helping Adolescent and Adult Patients Improve Asthma Control  Barbara P. Yawn, MD, MSc  Mayo Clinic Proceedings 
The Modern Management of Asthma: Getting it right Part 2
Global Initiative for Asthma (GINA) Teaching slide set 2017 update
12 months before treatment 12 months after treatment
Respiratory disorders
Childhood Asthma : Lessons still to be learnt
Global Initiative for Asthma (GINA) What’s new in GINA 2015?
Michael E. Wechsler, MD  Mayo Clinic Proceedings 
-Bronchial Asthma -Done by:- Aysheh AL-Majali -Supervised by :-
Pinja Ilmarinen, PhD, Leena E
The efficacy and safety of omalizumab in pediatric allergic asthma
Benefit–risk balance and its individual determinants with personalised chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) treatment choices. Benefit–risk balance.
Prescribing Update - Respiratory July 2019
Presentation transcript:

Global Initiative for Asthma (GINA) What’s new in GINA 2015?

What’s new in GINA 2015 (1) Add-on tiotropium by soft-mist inhaler is a new ‘other controller option’ for Steps 4 and 5, in patients ≥18 years with history of exacerbations Tiotropium was previously described in GINA as an add-on option on the basis of clinical trial evidence. It is now included in recommendations and the stepwise figure following approval for asthma by a major regulator.

GINA 2015 – changes to Steps 4 and 5 PREFERRED CONTROLLER CHOICE STEP 1 STEP 2 Refer for add-on treatment e.g. anti-IgE Med/high ICS/LABA Low dose ICS/LABA* Low dose ICS Other controller options Consider low dose ICS Leukotriene receptor antagonists (LTRA) Low dose theophylline* Med/high dose ICS Low dose ICS+LTRA (or + theoph*) Add tiotropium# High dose ICS + LTRA (or + theoph*) Add tiotropium# Add low dose OCS As-needed short-acting beta2-agonist (SABA) As-needed SABA or low dose ICS/formoterol** RELIEVER *For children 6-11 years, theophylline is not recommended, and preferred Step 3 is medium dose ICS **For patients prescribed BDP/formoterol or BUD/formoterol maintenance and reliever therapy # Tiotropium by soft-mist inhaler is indicated as add-on treatment for patients with a history of exacerbations; it is not indicated in children <18 years. GINA 2015, Box 3-5, Steps 4 and 5 © Global Initiative for Asthma

What’s new in GINA 2015 (2) Management of asthma in pregnancy Monitor for respiratory infections and manage them appropriately, because of increased risk of exacerbations Management of asthma during labor and delivery Give usual controller, and SABA if needed, e.g. following hyperventilation Watch for neonatal hyperglycaemia (especially in preterm babies) if high doses of SABA used in previous 48 hours Breathing exercises Evidence level down-graded from A to B following review of quality of evidence and a new meta-analysis (Freitas, Cochrane 2013) The term ‘breathing exercises’ is used, rather than ‘breathing techniques’, to avoid any perception that a specific technique is recommended

What’s new in GINA 2015 (3) Mild or moderate exacerbations Dry powder inhalers as effective as puffer and spacer for delivery of SABA in worsening asthma or exacerbations (Selroos, Ther Deliv. 2014) Note that studies did not include patients with severe acute asthma Life-threatening or severe acute asthma in primary care While arranging transfer to acute care facility, give inhaled ipratropium bromide as well as SABA, systemic corticosteroids, and oxygen if necessary Pre-school children with acute exacerbations or wheezing episodes Clarification that parent-administered oral steroids or high dose ICS are not generally recommended for pre-school children with acute wheezing or exacerbations Respiratory infections and wheezing occur very frequently in this age-group There is substantial concern about the risk of systemic side-effects, especially with repeated use A new flow-chart for pre-school children is included in GINA 2015

Managing exacerbations or wheezing in pre-schoolers For more detail, see GINA 2015 slide kit GINA 2015, Box 6-8

Other changes for clarification in GINA 2015 update Assessment of risk factors: over-usage of SABA High usage of SABA is a risk factor for exacerbations (Patel et al, CEA 2013) Very high usage (e.g. >200 doses/month) is a risk factor for asthma-related death (Haselkom, JACI 2009) Beta-blockers and acute coronary events If cardioselective beta-blockers are indicated for acute coronary events, asthma is not an absolute contra-indication. These medications should only be used under close medical supervision by a specialist, with consideration of the risks for and against their use Asthma-COPD Overlap Syndrome (ACOS) The aims of the chapter are mainly to assist clinicians in primary care and non-pulmonary specialties in diagnosing asthma and COPD as well as ACOS, and to assist in choosing initial treatment for efficacy and safety A specific definition cannot be provided for ACOS at present, because of the limited populations in which it has been studied ACOS is not considered to represent a single disease; it is expected that further research will identify several different underlying mechanisms

GINA resources are available at www.ginasthma.org Other changes in GINA 2015 The work of GINA is now supported only by income generated from the sale of GINA products GINA resources are available at www.ginasthma.org