A pump/nebuliser system has several attractions:
• administration does not require close supervision
• co-ordinated breathing manoeuvres are unnecessary
• combinations of drugs may be given simultaneously
• it is suitable at extremes of age
• the dose delivered, among other factors, is a function of time.
Currently available models are surprisingly efficient and have an average output of 1-2 mL over 10 minutes with about 30-50% of the output being as a respirable aerosol.
Weighed against these attractions are the considerable cost compared with simpler devices, the wastage of nebulised drug during exhalation and the fact that delivery of larger doses does not translate into better therapeutic responses. This is because there is a dose-response relationship which reaches a plateau so that delivering a larger dose via a nebuliser will produce no further bronchodilatation. A recent meta-analysis (16 trials, 375 adults, 686 children) concluded that metered dose inhalers with holding chambers (spacers) produced outcomes at least equivalent to nebuliser delivery.1
While the actual nebuliser unit is not expensive (about $18 retail), the driving source, which is usually a small compressor unit, costs between $180 and $480. It requires minimal maintenance and a good quality device should last 5-10 years. The economics of the nebulised solutions are relevant. Single dose units, although convenient, are nearly three times more expensive than the multi dose preparations.
Nebulisation is still necessary for preparations which are not available in other devices (for example, pentamidine prophylaxis against Pneumocystis carinii, mucolytics and rhDNase in cystic fibrosis). Most international guidelines dealing with the treatment of acute asthma in adults recommend a place for a nebulised short-acting beta agonist, using oxygen as the driving gas.2However, the current tendency is to use a pump/nebuliser system only when there are valid reasons for doing so rather than as a first-line approach to inhalational therapy.
Ultrasonic nebulisers have little if any place in asthma therapy. They are expensive and deliver an efficient aerosol which, because of the very fine particle size, can lead to difficulties with dose retention.