Patient Settings

Patients May Benefit from Twice-Daily Nebulization with LABAs

Successful Maintenance Therapy in Certain Settings

The device could make the difference for your patients in various care settings. Nebulization is effective across patient care settings including:

Key benefits of nebulization with long-acting beta2-agonists:

  • Easy three step technique versus eight steps (DPI) or nine steps (MDI)3
  • Effective drug delivery with nebulizer3
  • Twice-daily dosing1

Twice-daily dosing with nebulization throughout the day with a long-acting beta2-agonist can reduce the treatment burden associated with more frequent use of nebulization with short-acting beta2-agonists.1

Patients with Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD) have challenges, but successful treatment strategies can be implemented across care settings:

Patient challenges with inhaler devices may impact delivery of medication to the airway.3,4 Nebulization at home can be effective.

Nebulization is the easiest inhalation system for residents in long-term care settings to understand and use, which ensures compliance with therapy.12

Nebulization provides ease of administration that is not available with other delivery methods.

Please see accompanying full Prescribing Information, including Boxed Warning.

Indication

PERFOROMIST® (formoterol fumarate) Inhalation Solution is indicated for the long-term, twice-daily (morning and evening) administration in the maintenance treatment of bronchoconstriction in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), including chronic bronchitis and emphysema.

WARNING: ASTHMA-RELATED DEATH

Long-acting beta2-adrenergic agonists (LABA) increase the risk of asthma-related death. Data from a large placebo-controlled US study that compared the safety of another long-acting beta2-adrenergic agonist (salmeterol) or placebo added to usual asthma therapy showed an increase in asthma-related deaths in patients receiving salmeterol. This finding with salmeterol is considered a class effect of LABA, including formoterol, the active ingredient in PERFOROMIST Inhalation Solution. The safety and efficacy of PERFOROMIST in patients with asthma have not been established. All LABA, including PERFOROMIST, are contraindicated in patients with asthma without use of a long-term asthma control medication (see CONTRAINDICATIONS, WARNINGS AND PRECAUTIONS).

Important Safety Information

PERFOROMIST Inhalation Solution should not be used for the relief of acute symptoms, i.e., as rescue therapy for the treatment of acute episodes of bronchospasm.

PERFOROMIST Inhalation Solution should not be initiated in patients with acutely deteriorating COPD, which may be a life-threatening condition.

PERFOROMIST Inhalation Solution should be used with caution in patients with cardiovascular disorders, especially coronary insufficiency, cardiac arrhythmias, and hypertension; in patients with convulsive disorders or thyrotoxicosis; and in patients who are unusually responsive to sympathomimetic amines.

WARNINGS AND PRECAUTIONS

Deterioration of Disease and Acute Episodes
PERFOROMIST Inhalation Solution should not be initiated in patients with acutely deteriorating COPD, which may be a life-threatening condition. PERFOROMIST Inhalation Solution should not be used for the relief of acute symptoms, ie, as rescue therapy for the treatment of acute episodes of bronchospasm. Acute symptoms should be treated with an inhaled short-acting beta2-agonist

Excessive Use of PERFOROMIST Inhalation Solution and Use With Other Long-Acting Beta2-Agonists
PERFOROMIST Inhalation Solution should not be used more often, at higher doses than recommended, or in conjunction with other inhaled, long-acting beta2-agonists, as an overdose may result. Clinically significant cardiovascular effects and fatalities have been reported in association with excessive use of inhaled sympathomimetic drugs

Paradoxical Bronchospasm
As with other inhaled beta2-agonists, PERFOROMIST Inhalation Solution can produce paradoxical bronchospasm that may be life-threatening. If paradoxical bronchospasm occurs, PERFOROMIST Inhalation Solution should be discontinued immediately and alternative therapy instituted

Cardiovascular Effects
PERFOROMIST Inhalation Solution, like other beta2-agonists, can produce a clinically significant cardiovascular effect in some patients as measured by increases in pulse rate, systolic and/or diastolic blood pressure, and/or symptoms.

PERFOROMIST Inhalation Solution should be used with caution in patients with cardiovascular disorders, especially coronary insufficiency, cardiac arrhythmias, and hypertension; in patients with convulsive disorders or thyrotoxicosis; and in patients who are unusually responsive to sympathomimetic amines.

Coexisting Conditions
PERFOROMIST Inhalation Solution, like other sympathomimetic amines, should be used with caution in patients with convulsive disorders or thyrotoxicosis, and in patients who are unusually responsive to sympathomimetic amines. Doses of the related beta2-agonist albuterol, when administered intravenously, have been reported to aggravate preexisting diabetes mellitus and ketoacidosis

DRUG INTERACTIONS

MAO Inhibitors, Tricyclic Antidepressants and QTc Prolonging Drugs
PERFOROMIST Inhalation Solution, as with other beta2-agonists, should be used with extreme caution in patients being treated with monoamine oxidase inhibitors, tricyclic antidepressants, or drugs known to prolong the QTc interval because the action of adrenergic agonists on the cardiovascular system may be potentiated by these agents

You are encouraged to report negative side effects of prescription drugs to the FDA.
Visit www.fda.gov/medwatch, or call 1-800-FDA-1088.