Gulf Today

Could better inhalers help patients, and the planet?

Divo explains that boot-shaped inhalers, which represent nearly 90% of the US market for asthma medication, save lives but also contribute to climate change

- Martha Bebinger,

Miguel Divo, a lung specialist at Brigham and women’ s hospital in boston, sit sin an exam room across from Joel Rubinstein, who has asthma. Rubinstein, a retired psychiatri­st, is about to get a checkup and hear a surprising pitch — for the planet, as well as his health. Divo explains that boot-shaped inhalers, which represent nearly 90% of the US market for asthma medication, save lives but also contribute to climate change. Each puff from an inhaler releases a hydrofluor­ocarbon gas that is 1,430 to 3,000 times as powerful as the most commonly known greenhouse gas, carbon dioxide. “That absolutely never occurred to me,” said Rubinstein. “Especially, I mean, these are little, teeny things.”

So Divo has begun offering a more eco-friendly option to some patients with asthma and other lung diseases: a plastic, gray cylinder about the size and shape of a hockey puck that contains powdered medicine. Patients suck the powder into their lungs — no puff of gas required and no greenhouse gas emissions. “You have the same medication­s, two different delivery systems,” Divo said. Patients in the United States are prescribed roughly 144 million of what doctors call meter ed-dose inhalers each year, according to the most recently available data published in 2020. The cumulative amount of gas released is the equivalent of driving half a million gas-powered cars for a year. So, the benefits of moving to dry powder inhalers from gas inhalers could add up.

Hydro fluorocarb­on gas contribute­s to climate change, which is creating more wildfire smoke, other types of air pollution, and longer allergy seasons. These conditions can make breathing more difficult — especially for people with asthma and chronic obstructiv­e pulmonary disease, or COPD — and increase the use of inhalers. Divo is one of a small but growing number of US physicians determined to reverse what they see as an unhealthy cycle. “There is only one planet and one human race,” Divo said. “We are creating our own problems and we need to do something.” So Divo is working with patients like Rubinstein who may be willing to switch to dry powder inhalers. Rubinstein said no to the idea at first because the powder inhaler would have been more expensive. Then his insurer increased the copay on the metered-dose inhaler so Rubinstein decided to try the dry powder.

“For me, price is a big thing,” said Rubinstein, who has tracked health care and pharmaceut­ical spending in his profession­al roles for years. Inhaling the medicine using more of his own lung power was an adjustment. “The powder is a very strange thing, to blow powder into your mouth and lungs.” But for Rubinstein, the new inhaler works and his asthma is under control. A recent study found that some patients in the United Kingdom who use dry powder inhalers have better asthma control while reducing greenhouse gas emissions. In Sweden, where the vast majority of patients use dry powder inhalers, rates of severe asthma are lower than in the United States.

Rubin stein is one of a small number of us patients who have made the transition. Divo said that, for a variety of reasons, only about a quarter of his patients even consider switching. Dry powder inhalers are often more expensive than gas propellant inhalers. For some, dry powder isn’t a good option because not all asthma or COPD sufferers can get their medication­s in this form. And dry powder inhalers aren’t recommende­d for young children or elderly patients with diminished lung strength.

Also, some patients using dry powder inhalers worry that without the noise from the spray, they may not be receiving the proper dose. Other patients don’t like the taste powder inhalers can leave in their mouths. Divo said his priority is making sure patients have an inhaler they are comfortabl­e using and that they can afford. But, when appropriat­e, he’ll keep offering the dry powder option. Advocacy groups for asthma and COPD patients support more conversati­ons about the connection between inhalers and climate change. “The climate crisis makes these individual­s have a higher risk of exacerbati­on and worsening disease,” said Albert Rizzo, chief medical officer of the American Lung Associatio­n. “We don’t want medication­s to contribute to that.”

Rizzo said there is work being done to make metered-dose inhalers more climate-friendly. The United States and many other countries are phasing down the use of hydro fluorocarb­ons, which are also used in refrigerat­ors and air conditione­rs. It’s part of the global attempt to avoid the worst possible impacts of climate change. but inhaler manufactur­ers are largely exempt from those requiremen­ts and can continue to use the gases while they explore new options. Some leading inhaler manufactur­ers have pledged to produce canisters with less potent greenhouse gases and to submit them for regulatory review by next year. It’s not clear when these inhalers might be available in pharmacies. Separately, the FDA is spending about $6 million on a study about the challenges of developing inhalers with a smaller carbon footprint. Rizzo and other lung specialist­s worry these changes will translate into higher prices. That’s what happened in the early to mid-2000s when ozone-depleting chlorofluo­rocarbons (CFCS) were phased out of inhalers. manufactur­ers changed the gas in metered-dose inhalers and the cost to patients nearly doubled. Today, many of those reengineer­ed inhalers remain expensive.

William Feldman, a pulmonolog­ist and health policy researcher at brigham and women’ s hospital, said these dramatic price increases occur because manufactur­ers register updated inhalers as new products, even though they deliver medication­s already on the market. The manufactur­ers are then awarded patents, which prevent the production of competing generic medication­s for decades. The Federal Trade Commission says it is cracking down on this practice. After the CFC ban, “manufactur­ers earned billions of dollars from the inhalers ,” feldman said of the re-engineered inhalers. When inhaler costs went up, physicians say, patients cut back on puffs and suffered more asthma attacks. Gregg Furie, medical director for climate and sustainabi­lity at Brigham and Women’s Hospital, is worried that’s about to happen again.

“While these new propellant­s are potentiall­y a real positive developmen­t, there’s also a significan­t risk that we’re going to see patients and payers face significan­t cost hikes,” Furie said. Some of the largest inhaler manufactur­ers, including GSK, are already under scrutiny for allegedly inflating prices in the United States. Sydney Dodson-nease told NPR and KFF Health News that the company has a strong record for keeping medicines accessible to patients but that it’s too early to comment on the price of the more environmen­tally sensitive inhalers the company is developing. Developing affordable, effective, and climate-friendly inhalers will be important for hospitals as well as patients.

The Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality recommends that hospitals looking to shrink their carbon footprint reduce inhaler emissions. Some hospital administra­tors see switching inhalers as low-hanging fruit on the list of climate-change improvemen­ts a hospital might make.

But Brian Chesebro, medical director of environmen­tal stewardshi­p at Providence, a hospital network in Oregon, said, “It’s not as easy as swapping inhalers.” Chesebro said that even among metered-dose inhalers, the climate impact varies. So pharmacist­s should suggest the inhalers with the fewest greenhouse gas emissions. Insurers should also adjust reimbursem­ents to favor climate-friendly alternativ­es, he said, and regulators could consider emissions when reviewing hospital performanc­e. Samantha Green, a family physician in Toronto, said clinicians can make a big difference with inhaler emissions by starting with the question: Does the patient in front of me really need one?

Green, who works on a project to make inhalers more environmen­tally sustainabl­e, said that research shows a third of adults diagnosed with asthma may not have the disease .“so that’ s an easy place to start,” Green said. “Make sure the patient prescribed an inhaler is actually benefiting from it.” Green said educating patients has a measurable effect. In her experience, patients are moved to learn that emissions from the approximat­ely 200 puffs in one inhaler are equivalent to driving about 100 miles in a gas-powered car. Some researcher­s say switching to dry powder inhalers may be as beneficial for the climate as a patient adopting a vegetarian diet.

 ?? Tribune News Service ?? Miguel Divo shows his patient, Joel Rubinstein, a dry powder inhaler. It has a much lower carbon footprint than a traditiona­l inhaler while being equally effective for many patients with asthma.
Tribune News Service Miguel Divo shows his patient, Joel Rubinstein, a dry powder inhaler. It has a much lower carbon footprint than a traditiona­l inhaler while being equally effective for many patients with asthma.

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