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. 1998 Sep;3(3):193-7.
doi: 10.1111/j.1440-1843.1998.tb00120.x.

Increased use of inhaled corticosteroids and reduced hospitalizations in adult asthmatics: 11 years' experience in a Japanese hospital

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Increased use of inhaled corticosteroids and reduced hospitalizations in adult asthmatics: 11 years' experience in a Japanese hospital

K Ishihara et al. Respirology. 1998 Sep.

Abstract

Until recently, inhaled corticosteroids have not been recognized as a first-line drug mainly because of the traditional polypharmaceutical approach to asthma in Japan. To examine the trend more precisely following the introduction of inhaled corticosteroids, we retrospectively analysed the relation between the number of prescriptions for anti-asthma drugs including inhaled corticosteroids and the number of hospitalizations due to asthma exacerbation, near fatal episodes and deaths from asthma for a period of 11 years from 1986 to 1996 at Kobe City General Hospital (KCGH). A marked decline in these actual indices in patients attending KCGH, which shows the improvement in asthma control, started coincidentally with the increased use of inhaled corticosteroid, which was followed by both a discontinuation of the trend for increased use of inhaled beta-agonists and the decreased use of oral anti-asthma agents. There was no significant difference in the mean duration of hospital stays between 1988 and 1996. Although the intensification of patient education is likely to play an important role in enhancing the protective effect of inhaled corticosteroids, we highly suspect that the major contributory factor in the great decline in hospitalizations is the increased use of inhaled corticosteroids.

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