The aim of asthma management is control of the disease. Complete control is defined as
no daytime symptoms
no night-time awakening due to asthma
no need for rescue medication
no asthma attacks
no limitations on activity including exercise
normal lung function (in practical terms FEV1 and/or PEF >80% predicted or best)
minimal side effects from medication
NICE state (1):
Initial management in children aged 5 to 11
a twice-daily paediatric low-dose inhaled corticosteroid (ICS), with a short-acting beta2 agonist (SABA) as needed, should be offered as initial treatment for children aged 5 to 11 years with newly diagnosed asthma
Medicine combination and sequencing in children aged 5 to 11
Maintenance and reliever therapy (MART) definition:
a form of combined ICS plus formoterol treatment in which a single inhaler containing ICS and formoterol is used for daily maintenance therapy and the relief of symptoms as needed
terms low-dose MART and moderate-dose MART refer to the dosage of the maintenance component of MART
people using MART do not normally need a SABA
MART pathway
paediatric low-dose MART (maintenance and reliever therapy should be considered for children with asthma that is not controlled on paediatric low-dose ICS plus SABA as needed, as long as they are assessed to have the ability to manage a MART regimen
Conventional pathway
adding a leukotriene receptor antagonist (LTRA) to twice daily paediatric low-dose ICS plus SABA as needed should be considered when a child has uncontrolled asthma and is assessed as unable to manage the MART regimen
the LTRA should be given for a trial period 8 to 12 weeks (unless there are side effects), then stop it if it is ineffective
a twice daily paediatric low-dose ICS/LABA (long-acting beta2 agonist combination inhaler plus SABA as needed
should be offered to children assessed as unable to manage the MART regimen if their asthma is not controlled on paediatric low-dose ICS plus SABA as needed (with or without an LTRA depending on previous response)
a twice daily paediatric moderate-dose ICS/LABA inhaler plus SABA as needed
should be offered to children with asthma that is not controlled on paediatric low-dose ICS/LABA plus SABA as needed (with or without an LTRA depending on previous response)
Refer children to a specialist in asthma care if their asthma is not controlled on paediatric moderate-dose MART or paediatric moderate-dose ICS/LABA maintenance treatment (with or without an LTRA, depending on previous response).
Decreasing maintenance therapy Principles:
When decreasing maintenance therapy:
stop or reduce dose of medicines in an order that takes into account the clinical effectiveness when introduced, side effects and the person's preference.
allow at least 8 to 12 weeks before considering a further treatment reduction
if considering step-down treatment for people aged 12 and over who are using low-dose maintenance inhaled corticosteroid (ICS) plus a short-acting beta2 agonist (SABA) as needed or low-dose MART, step down to low-dose ICS/formoterol combination inhaler as needed (as-needed AIR therapy
A pragmatic summary of this guidance with practical suggested options has been stated as (2):
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