
A patient with asthma requests additional albuterol refills after using 3 inhalers in the past 2 months.
Which of the following is the most appropriate interpretation of this finding?
- Frequent albuterol use confirms that the patient’s asthma is well controlled because symptoms improve with treatment.
- Regular albuterol use reduces the likelihood of future systemic corticosteroid exposure.
- High albuterol utilization eliminates the need for maintenance inhaled corticosteroid therapy.
- Excessive reliance on albuterol may indicate uncontrolled airway inflammation and increased exacerbation risk.
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Correct answer: d. Excessive reliance on albuterol may indicate uncontrolled airway inflammation and increased exacerbation risk.
Using 3 albuterol inhalers in 2 months indicates poor control of asthma symptoms and should raise concern. While symptoms may temporarily improve after use, frequent short-acting beta agonist (SABA) use does not treat the underlying airway inflammation. Overreliance on SABA is associated with increased risk of severe exacerbations, urgent care or emergency visits, hospitalization, and asthma-related mortality. This patient should be assessed for asthma control, inhaler technique, adherence, triggers, and initiation or escalation of an inhaled corticosteroid-containing therapy.
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Tracey Davidoff, MD, FACP, FCUCM, has practiced Urgent Care Medicine for more than 15 years. She is Board Certified in Internal Medicine. Dr. Davidoff is a member of the Board of Directors of the Urgent Care Association and serves as Co-Editor-in-Chief of the College of Urgent Care Medicine’s “Urgent Caring” publication. She is also the Vice President of the Southeast Regional Urgent Care Association and a member of the editorial board of the Journal of Urgent Care Medicine. At EB Medicine, Dr Davidoff is Editor-In-Chief of Evidence-Based Urgent Care, and co-host of the Urgentology podcast.

