Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2566956 Pulmonary Pharmacology & Therapeutics 2016 9 Pages PDF
Abstract

BackgroundTo date there is emerging clinical evidence to add long-acting anti-muscarinic agents (LAMAs) with inhaled corticosteroid (ICSs) in asthma, but the pharmacological rationale that supports the use of such a combination has not yet been explained. The aim of this study was to pharmacologically investigate the interaction between the ICS beclomethasone and the LAMA glycopyrronium on the human airway smooth muscle (ASM) tone.MethodsWe investigated the rapid non-genomic bronchorelaxant effect of beclomethasone and glycopyrronium, administered alone and in combination, in human isolated bronchi and bronchioles. Experiments were carried out also in passively sensitized airways and the pharmacological analysis of drug interaction was performed by Bliss Independence method.ResultsThe acute administration of beclomethasone and glycopyrronium induced a significant relaxation of passively sensitized ASM pre-contracted with histamine, by causing submaximal/maximal inhibition of the contractile tone in both medium bronchi and bronchioles. Beclomethasone was characterized by a rapid non-genomic and epithelium independent bronchorelaxant effect. In passively sensitized airways, this effect seemed to be dependent by the activation of a Gsα – cyclic adenosine monophosphate (cAMP) – protein kinase A cascade. While no synergistic interaction was detected in non-sensitized bronchi, the beclomethasone/glycopyrronium combination synergistically enhanced the relaxation of passively sensitized medium and small bronchi. The synergistic interaction between beclomethasone and glycopyrronium was associated with an increase of cAMP concentrations.ConclusionsOur study provides for the first time the pharmacological rationale for combining low doses of an ICS plus a LAMA.

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