Jurnal Respirologi Indonesia
Vol 42, No 2 (2022)

An evaluation of short-acting β2-agonist prescriptions and associated clinical outcomes in asthma management in Indonesia – the SABINA Indonesia study

Wiwien Heru Wiyono (Department Of Pulmonology & Respiratory Medicine , Faculty of Medicine Universitas Indonesia / Persahabatan Hospital Jakarta)
Muhammad Amin (Faculty of Medicine Universitas Airlangga/Universitas Airlangga Hospital, Surabaya)
Susanthy Djajalaksana (Pulmonology and Respiratory Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, University of Brawijaya/Saiful Anwar Hospital, Malang)
Amira Permatasari Tarigan (Department of Pulmonology and Respiratory Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, Universitas Sumatera Utara/Universitas Sumatera Utara Hospital, Medan)
Febrina Susanti (Department of Respiratory Medicine, RSUD Budhi Asih, Jakarta)
Hisham Farouk (AstraZeneca International, Dubai, United Arab Emirates)
Helyanna Helyanna (AstraZeneca Indonesia, Jakarta)



Article Info

Publish Date
13 Apr 2022

Abstract

Background: Asthma is a chronic inflammatory disease, therefore inhaled corticosteroid (ICS) should be as the cornerstone of asthma treatment. However patients tend to rely on short-acting β2-agonist (SABA) due to immediate symptom relief and underuse ICS, thereby undertreating the underlying inflammation. As part of the multi-country SABA use IN Asthma (SABINA) III study, we aimed to describe SABA prescription patterns and asthma-related clinical outcome in Indonesia.Methods: Cross-sectional study in asthma patients (> 12 years old) during August 2019 –  January 2020. Disease characteristic, prescribed asthma treatment in the 12 months before the study visit, and clinical outcomes, were recorded during a single visit and entered into an electronic case report form.Results: Of 219 patients recruited, the mean number of SABA canisters prescribed was 4 canisters per year. SABA over-prescription (≥ 3 canisters/year) seen in 37% patients, and was greater in moderate-to-severe vs mild asthma (40% vs 17.9%). 47.5% of patients had at least 1 severe exacerbation; and 7.3% of patients had ≥3 severe exacerbations, in the past 12 months. Almost half of the patients (40.2%) were prescribed oral corticosteroids (OCS). Overall, the well-, partly, and uncontrolled patients were 41.6%, 37.4%, and 21%, respectively.Conclusion: SABA over-prescription occurs in approximately one third of asthma patients, especially among moderate-to-severe patients and almost half of asthma patients experienced at least 1 severe exacerbation in the previous year. This highlights a public health concern and the need to improve asthma care by aligning with global recommendations including reducing SABA over-reliance in Indonesia

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Journal Info

Abbrev

jri

Publisher

Subject

Health Professions Medicine & Pharmacology

Description

Jurnal Respirologi Indonesia (JRI) is an online and printed scientific publication of the Indonesian Society of Respirology (ISR). The journal is published thrice-monthly within a year (January, April, July and October). The journal is focused to present original article, article review, and case ...