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(Chest. 2004;126:1946-1953.)
© 2004 American College of Chest Physicians

Tiotropium Bromide*

Nicholas J. Gross, MD, PhD, FCCP

* From the Hines VA Hospital, Hines, IL.

Correspondence to: Nicholas J. Gross, MD, PhD, FCCP, PO Box 1485, Hines, IL 60141; e-mail: Nicholas.gross{at}med.va.gov

Tiotropium bromide is a novel, inhaled, once-daily anticholinergic bronchodilator that has recently been approved in the United States for use in patients with COPD. Its unique feature is the persistence of bronchodilation for > 24 h due to prolonged M3 muscarinic receptor blockade. Tiotropium provides significant improvement in spirometry and lung volumes. Clinically relevant outcomes such as the relief of dyspnea, improvement in the quality of life (health status), and reductions in the frequency and severity of acute exacerbations have been consistently obtained with tiotropium in clinical trials. In head-to-head trials, tiotropium administered once daily resulted in bronchodilation (peak, trough, and area under the curve) that was statistically superior to ipratropium administered four times daily and salmeterol administered twice daily. Clinical outcomes (dyspnea, quality of life, exacerbation frequency) were numerically but not always statistically better with tiotropium than salmeterol. Long-term studies of the combination of tiotropium with adrenergic agents, methylxanthines, or inhaled corticosteroids have not been reported in full. Several 1-year studies demonstrate that the only significant side effect of tiotropium was dryness of the mouth, which occurred in approximately 10 to 16% of patients; it is well tolerated by patients and safe.

Key Words: acute exacerbations of COPD • adverse effects • anticholinergic agent • bronchodilators • COPD • quality of life • tiotropium bromide • transition dyspnea index




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