Table of Contents
- Trial overview
- Asthma studies
- COPD studies
- Other conditions studied
- Study designs and participants
- Endpoints measured
- What Salbutamol means in these trials
Trial overview
The trial data show that Salbutamol is being used in studies across several conditions, not just one disease.[1] Most of the trials are in asthma and COPD, with other studies in congenital myopathy, hyperkalemia, chronic pulmonary aspergillosis, and food allergy.[1]
Many of the studies are Phase 3 trials, which usually means the treatment is being tested in larger groups to learn more about how well it works and how safe it is.[1] One study is Phase 2, and one COPD study is listed as Low Intervention.[1]
Asthma studies
Several trials include people with asthma, including children aged 2 to less than 6 years, children aged 6 to less than 12 years, adults with moderate-to-severe uncontrolled asthma, and adults and adolescents with severe and inadequately controlled asthma.[1]
In these asthma studies, Salbutamol is often one of the inhaled treatments used in the trial design, sometimes alongside placebo or other asthma medicines.[1] The main goals are to improve lung function, reduce severe asthma flare-ups, and compare different inhaler treatments over weeks or months.[1]
- Children with asthma are included in studies that measure change in FEV1, which is a breathing test that shows how much air a person can blow out in one second.[1]
- Adults with uncontrolled asthma are studied to see whether new treatments improve lung function or delay asthma events, with Salbutamol used as part of the study plan.[1]
- Severe asthma studies look at both lung function and the rate of severe exacerbations, which means serious flare-ups that need extra treatment.[1]
COPD studies
Several trials focus on COPD, a long-term lung disease that can make breathing difficult and can lead to flare-ups.[1] These studies include people with moderate to severe COPD and those with a history of exacerbations, meaning past flare-ups.[1]
In COPD trials, Salbutamol is used in inhalation form as part of the comparison or treatment setup.[1] The main outcomes often look at lung function, exercise-related breathing measures, or the time until a first severe heart or COPD event.[1]
- Exercise and lung function studies measure whether treatment improves breathing during activity and reduces dynamic hyperinflation, which means too much air stays trapped in the lungs.[1]
- Cardiopulmonary outcome studies track serious heart or COPD events over time in large groups of participants.[1]
- Long-term COPD studies look at severe exacerbation rates in former smokers with COPD.[1]
Other conditions studied
One Phase 3 study in congenital myopathy enrolled 20 participants and aimed to improve muscle strength and muscle function.[1] The main outcome was the change in the MFM32 score after 6 months of treatment compared with no treatment.[1]
Another Phase 3 trial studied hyperkalemia, which means high potassium in the blood, in emergency departments.[1] This study compared nebulized Salbutamol, insulin/dextrose infusion, and the combination of both, and measured the change in serum potassium after 60 minutes.[1]
A Phase 3 study in chronic pulmonary aspergillosis included non- or mildly immunocompromised patients and looked at a 6-month treatment result based on clinical and radiological improvement.[1] Salbutamol appears in the intervention list for this study as part of the treatment setup.[1]
One food allergy extension study also listed Salbutamol among its interventions, while its main purpose was long-term safety and tolerability of ligelizumab.[1]
Study designs and participants
The trials use different study designs, including interventional studies, randomised studies, placebo-controlled studies, double-blind studies, and active-controlled studies.[1] These designs help researchers compare treatments in a fair way and reduce bias, which means reducing the chance that the results are influenced by expectations.[1]
Participants range from young children to older adults, depending on the condition being studied.[1] Some studies are very large, such as the COPD trial with 5,000 participants, while others are much smaller, such as the congenital myopathy study with 20 participants.[1]
- Children are included in asthma studies that focus on lung function and safety.[1]
- Adults are included in asthma, COPD, hyperkalemia, and chronic pulmonary aspergillosis studies.[1]
- Former smokers and older adults are important groups in some COPD studies.[1]
Endpoints measured
Trials use endpoints, which are the main results the researchers want to measure.[1] In the Salbutamol trial data, endpoints include FEV1, MFM32, serum potassium change, annualized exacerbation rate, time to first event, and mucus scores.[1]
- FEV1 is used in many asthma and COPD studies to measure lung function after treatment.[1]
- MFM32 is used in congenital myopathy to measure muscle function over time.[1]
- Serum potassium is used in hyperkalemia to see how quickly treatment lowers high potassium levels.[1]
- Exacerbation rate measures how often serious disease flare-ups happen during the study period.[1]
- Mucus score is used in one COPD study to assess airway mucus plugging on scans.[1]
What Salbutamol means in these trials
In this trial set, Salbutamol is not always the main medicine being tested.[1] In some studies it is part of the comparison group, in some it is used as a rescue or standard treatment, and in others it appears in the intervention list while another drug is the main focus.[1]
This means the clinical research is looking at Salbutamol in different real-world trial settings, especially where breathing symptoms, lung function, or urgent treatment are important.[1] The trial data show a broad research use across respiratory disease and a few non-respiratory conditions.[1]



