Underutilization of anti-inflammatory agents in the treatment of asthma has
received widespread attention. Inhaled glucocorticosteroids are important
agents for the management of asthma in children and adults. Budesonide has
a high ratio of topical anti-inflammatory to systemic activity and is one o
f the most extensively used inhaled glucocorticoids. Budesonide inhalation
suspension is the first formulation designed to deliver budesonide by way o
f nebulization for infants and children under 8 years of age with persisten
t asthma, Budesonide decreases airway hyperresponsiveness and reduces the n
umber of inflammatory cells and mediators present in the airways of patient
s with asthma. Budesonide appears to be retained within cells, allowing for
a once-daily treatment regimen in certain patient groups. After inhalation
of nebulized budesonide, absorption is rapid. Data suggest that plasma con
centrations of budesonide are similar in adults and children after inhalati
on of the same nominal dose from a nebulizer. In children 3 to 6 years of a
ge, total systemic availability of budesonide after dosing with a jet nebul
izer was approximately 6% of the labeled dose. Budesonide is highly protein
bound, undergoes extensive first-pass hepatic metabolism, is metabolized b
y the liver cytochrome P450 system, and is primarily excreted in the urine
as metabolites. In children 3 to 6 years of age, the volume of distribution
at steady state of budesonide inhalation suspension is approximately 3 L/k
g, with a terminal elimination half-life of 2.3 hours; systemic clearance i
s approximately 30 mL/kg. The pharmacodynamic and pharmacokinetic propertie
s of budesonide inhalation suspension allow for potent local anti-inflammat
ory activity with limited systemic exposure.