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Eur Respir J 1998; 11: 1006-1008
Copyright © ERS Journals Ltd 1998


Original Articles

Chlorofluorocarbon-free inhalers: are we ready for the change?

MR Partridge, AA Woodcock, AL Sheffer, A Wanner, and A Rubinfeld

Chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs) damage stratospheric ozone permitting enhanced levels of ultraviolet B radiation to reach the Earth's surface. As a result, production of CFCs is now banned under the Montreal Protocol with the exception of their temporary continued use in pressurized metered dose inhalers used to treat those with airway disorders. Replacement propellants have now been identified and shown to be safe and a major exercise is under way to reformulate the commonly used aerosolized medicines with the new propellants. The new products are now undergoing clinical trials and the first reformulated beta-agonist and corticosteroid inhalers have reached the marketplace. The majority of the current products will have been changed over to the new types over the next 3 yrs, and each country will adapt a transition strategy to oversee this process. The politicians, the environmentalists, the pharmaceutical industry and the regulatory authorities have fulfilled their part in this changeover, and respiratory interested health professionals now need to address what this means for them and their patients so that there may be a seamless transition for the millions of people who use inhaled medicines worldwide.


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Copyright © 1998 by the European Respiratory Society.