Skip to main content
. 2013 Dec;4(6):254–263. doi: 10.1177/2042098613504124

Table 2.

Summary of influential pediatric long-acting beta agonist ( LABA) and inhaled corticosteroid (ICS) safety studies.

Study Study design Drug class Pediatric only Time period Sample size if applicable Major findings
Allen et al. [1998] Randomized, blinded, parallel group, placebo-controlled clinical trial ICS Yes 1 year 325 ICS-treated children grew at rates similar to placebo-treated control subjects
Bensch et al. [2002] Randomized, blinded, placebo-controlled clinical trial LABA Yes 1 year 518 Incidence of hospitalizations for asthma higher in formoterol groups versus placebo group
Bisgaard [2003] Meta-analysis covering 8 randomized, blinded, clinical trials for pediatric patients LABA Yes ≥6 weeks 2,401 LABA use did not protect pediatric patients from asthma exacerbations compared to patients receiving an ICS, short-acting inhaled β2 agonist (SABA), or placebo; there was a significant increase in asthma-related hospitalizations for children taking a LABA
Castle et al. [1993] Randomized, blinded, parallel group, clinical trial LABA No 16 weeks 25,180 Twelve asthma-related and respiratory deaths in salmeterol group versus two in salbutamol group
Childhood Asthma Management Program Research Group [2000] Randomized, blinded, placebo-controlled, clinical trial ICS Yes 4–6 years 1,041 Children assigned to ICS had lower growth than those assigned to nedocromil (mast stabilizer) or placebo
Garcia Garcia et al. [2005] Randomized, blinded, noninferiority, clinical trial ICS Yes 1 year 994 Children assigned to ICS had lower growth compared with those assigned an leukotriene receptor antagonist
Guilbert et al. [2006] Randomized, blinded, placebo-controlled, clinical trial ICS Yes 2–3 years 285 Children assigned to ICS had lower growth than those assigned to placebo
Guo et al. [2011] Retrospective population-based cohort study for Medicaid patients ≤40 years old LABA No 6 years 940,449 Relative to SABA-only use, LABA use is associated with a higher risk of hospitalization but lower risk of emergency-department visit
Malone et al. [2005] Randomized, blinded, parallel group, active controlled, clinical trial LABA/ICS Yes 12 weeks 203 Safety profile for LABA/ICS treatment similar to that of ICS-only treatment
Nayak et al. [2002] Randomized, blinded, parallel group, placebo-controlled, clinical trial ICS Yes 12 weeks 353 No difference in the incidence or nature of adverse events between ICS and placebo groups
Nelson et al. [2006] Randomized, blinded, parallel group, placebo-controlled, observational study LABA No 28 weeks 26,355 Rate of asthma-related deaths or life-threatening experiences was significantly higher for patients on LABA therapy compared with placebo
Pauwels et al. [2003] Randomized, blinded, placebo-controlled clinical trial ICS No 3 years 7,241 3-year growth in children was reduced in the budesonide group by 1.34 cm; reduction was greatest in the first year
Rodrigo et al. [2009] Meta-analysis covering 92 randomized, blinded, clinical trials LABA/ICS No ≥4 weeks 74,092 LABA/ICS-versus-ICS studies showed that combination therapy reduced exacerbations and hospitalizations and was equivalent to ICS monotherapy in terms of life-threatening events and asthma-related deaths
Simons [1997] Randomized, blinded, parallel group, placebo-controlled clinical trial ICS Yes 1 year 241 Growth was lower in children taking an ICS versus those on a LABA medication or placebo
Tal et al. [2002] Randomized, blinded, parallel group, double-dummy clinical trial LABA/ICS Yes 12 weeks 286 Treatment groups were similar in terms of their adverse-event profile and rates of discontinuation
von Berg et al. [1998] Randomized, blinded, parallel group, placebo-controlled clinical trial LABA Yes 1 year 426 Exacerbation rates did not vary between salmeterol and placebo groups
Zimmerman et al. [2004] Randomized, blinded, parallel group, placebo-controlled clinical trial LABA/ICS Yes 12 weeks 302 No difference in asthma exacerbations between LABA/ICS and ICS-only groups