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Evidence summaries

Anticholinergics for Maintenance Treatment of Stable COPD

Anticholinergics improve FEV1, excercise capacity and symptoms compared with placebo. Tiotropium reduces exacerbation rates compared with placebo or ipratropium. Level of evidence: "A"

A topic in Clinical Evidence 1 summarizes the results of systematic reviews and a number of mostly relatively small RCTs. Several RCTs found that ipratropium improved FEV1 compared to placebo. According to a systematic review (search date 1999) ipratropium improved exercise capacity compared with placebo in 16 of 17 studies. Three RCTs (total n=935) found that tiotropium improved FEV1 compared to placebo at 4 to 13 weeks. One large RCT (n=5887) found that adding ipratropium to a smoking cessation program had no significant impact compared with smoking cessation program alone on decline in FEV1 over 5 years. Two RCTs found that tiotropium reduced exacerbations and hospital admissions compared with placebo (exacerbations per patient per year in the first RCT: 0.76 vs 0.95, p<0.05; hospitalizations 5.5% vs 9.4%, p<0.05) and one found tiotropium more effective than ipratropium (exacerbations 0.73 vs 0.96, p=0.006; quality of life p>0.001).

References

Primary/Secondary Keywords