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concentrations of flunisolide from the flunisolide CFC inhalation aerosol 1000 mcg and
AEROSPAN Inhalation Aerosol 320 mcg were found to be 2.5 ng/mL and 3.3 ng/mL,
respectively. The corresponding mean AUC values were 5.1 ng.hr/mL and 5.8 ng.hr/mL,
respectively. The mean peak plasma concentrations of 6
β
-OH flunisolide from
flunisolide CFC inhalation aerosol 1000 mcg and AEROSPAN Inhalation Aerosol 320
μ
g were found to be 0.8 ng/mL and 0.3 ng/mL, respectively. The corresponding mean
AUC values were 3.8 ng.hr/mL and 2.3 ng.hr/mL, respectively.
Controlled clinical studies with flunisolide CFC inhalation aerosol included over 500
treated
asthma patients, among them 150 children aged 6 years and older. Open label
studies of two years or more duration included more than 120 treated patients. No
significant adrenal suppression attributed to flunisolide was seen in these studies.
The potential effects of AEROSPAN Inhalation Aerosol and flunisolide CFC inhalation
aerosol on the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis were studied in 2 placebo- and
active-controlled studies and 2 active-controlled, open label, long-term studies (see
CLINICAL TRIALS). In the placebo-controlled studies, the ability to increase cortisol
production in response to stress was assessed by the 60 minute cosyntropin (ACTH)
stimulation test. For adult and adolescent patients treated
with AEROSPAN Inhalation
Aerosol 80 mcg, 160 mcg, 320 mcg, or placebo twice daily for 12 weeks, 92% (22/24),
93% (26/28), 93% (26/28), and 92% (22/24) of patients, normal at baseline, respectively,
continued to have a normal stimulated cortisol response (peak cortisol
≥
18 mcg/dL and
an increase in plasma cortisol
≥
7 mcg/dL within 60 minutes after cosyntropin injection)
at trial’s end. All patients had peak cortisol levels
≥
18mcg/dL. There was no significant
suppression of 24
hour urinary cortisol, and 100% (96/96) of patients treated with
AEROSPAN Inhalation Aerosol had normal morning serum cortisol levels at the end of
study. For pediatric patients treated with the AEROSPAN Inhalation Aerosol, 80 mcg
and 160 mcg or placebo twice daily for 12 weeks, 91% (31/34), 97% (28/29), and 89%
(24/27) of patients, respectively, continued to have a normal stimulated cortisol response
(as defined above) at trial’s end. No suppression of 24-hour urinary cortisol was noted.
In these studies, comparable results were obtained in patients
treated with flunisolide
CFC inhalation aerosol.
In the active-controlled, open label, long-term studies, 99.4% (161/162) of adult and
adolescent patients and 98.4% (126/128) pediatric patients treated with AEROSPAN
Inhalation Aerosol had normal morning serum cortisol levels (
≥
5 mcg/dL) after 12 or 52
weeks of treatment, respectively. For patients treated with AEROSPAN Inhalation
Aerosol, 92.5% (99/107) continued to have a normal stimulated
plasma cortisol response
to cosyntropin at trial’s end with all having peak cortisol levels
≥
18mcg/dL. In these
studies, no suppression of 24-hour urinary cortisol was noted, and comparable results
were obtained in patients treated with flunisolide CFC inhalation aerosol.
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