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Quintiles will help bring COPD drug to U.K. market

Quintiles will help Barcelona-based Almirall bring its new respiratory drugs to market in the United Kingdom.

Under the long-term partnership announced Monday morning, the first drug will treat chronic obstructive pulmonary disease treatment (COPD). The treatment was approved by the European Commission in late May.

Quintiles is a Durham-based contract research organization. It conducted part of the clinical study of the COPD treatment and also helps Almirall bring products to market in multiple European countries.

No financial terms of the deal were disclosed.

Inhalers may be risk to COPD patients

Patients with Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease had an increased risk of pneumonia if they were long-time users of popular corticosteriod inhalers.

Those findings were published Monday in the Archives of Internal Medicine by researchers at Wake Forest School of Medicine.

The reseachers examined 18 clinical trials involving more than 17,000 patients to explore links between pneumonia and the inhalers, including Advair and Symbicort.

According to their analysis, patients who used the inhalers for at least 24 weeks had a 60 percent to 70 percent increased risk of developing pneumonia.

The inhalers are not approved by the government as a sole therapy for COPD, a respiratory ailment that causes wheezing and shortness of breath. But they can be prescribed with other drugs that dilate the lungs.

"Given the substantial emerging risk of pneumonia and its associated morbidity and mortality in patients with chronic obstructive lung disease, and the uncertain benefit of adding an inhaled corticosteroid to a long-acting bronchodilator, clinicians should re-evaluate the benefit-harm profile of long-term inhaled corticosteroid use among patients with COPD,” Dr. Sonal Singh, an assistant professor of internal medicine and lead investigator for the study, said in a prepared statement.

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