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Real Life Pharmacology - Pharmacology Education for Health Care Professionals

Airsupra (Albuterol/budesonide) Pharmacology

Real Life Pharmacology - Pharmacology Education for Health Care Professionals

Eric Christianson, PharmD; Pharmacology Expert and Clinical Pharmacist

Education, Health & Fitness, Medicine

5716 Ratings

🗓️ 23 October 2025

⏱️ 12 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Airsupra is a combination inhaler that contains albuterol and budesonide, approved for as-needed use in adults with asthma. It represents the first rescue inhaler to combine a short-acting beta-2 agonist (SABA) with an inhaled corticosteroid (ICS) in a single device. The albuterol component provides rapid bronchodilation by relaxing airway smooth muscle, while budesonide works to reduce airway inflammation and mucus production. This dual mechanism allows Airsupra to not only relieve acute bronchoconstriction but also address the underlying inflammatory process that contributes to asthma exacerbations.



Clinically, Airsupra is indicated for as-needed treatment or prevention of bronchoconstriction in adults with asthma, but it is not approved for COPD. The typical dosing is two inhalations as needed, with a maximum of six doses (12 inhalations) in a 24-hour period.



The rationale for its use aligns with recent asthma guideline updates, which emphasize minimizing SABA-only use because it fails to address inflammation and may contribute to worse outcomes over time.



Common adverse effects include tremor, nervousness, tachycardia, and hypokalemia from albuterol, as well as oral thrush and hoarseness from budesonide. Patients should rinse and spit after each use to reduce the risk of oral candidiasis.



Drug interactions can occur with non-selective beta-blockers, which may blunt albuterol’s effects. CYP3A4 also plays a role in budesonide metabolism. Systemic absorption typically isn't too much of an issue with infrequent use.

Transcript

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0:00.0

Hey all, welcome back to the Real Life Pharmacology podcast.

0:03.1

I'm your host pharmacist, Eric Christensen.

0:05.2

Thank you so much for listening today.

0:07.5

As always, go check out Real Life Pharmacology.com.

0:10.8

We've got your free 31-page PDF on the top 200 drugs.

0:15.5

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0:17.6

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0:20.7

Also, with your email subscription, we'll get you updates when we've got new podcasts and other content available as well.

0:27.3

So definitely a no-brainer to snag that. Simply an email is all it will cost you at real-life pharmacology.com.

0:35.3

All right. Drug of the day today is Air Supra.

0:39.3

That is the brand name.

0:42.0

This is a relatively newer medication that has come out, and it is a combination of a

0:46.9

beta agonist, more specifically a short-acting beta agonist in albuterol and an inhaled corticosteroid.

0:57.3

So that inhaled corticosteroid is budesinide.

1:00.1

So combo of albuterol and budesinide.

1:04.4

So the budesinide piece of this is anti-inflammatory.

1:09.6

Again, it's an inhaled corticosteroid. It reduces that

1:13.5

airway inflammation that is prominent in asthma, which is what we're going to use this medication

1:20.0

for in most cases. The albuterol is the short-acting beta agonist, and specifically it's an agonist at beta-2 receptors.

1:33.4

So this is going to cause bronchodilation, basically that airway to open up,

1:40.5

and help patients who are having an asthma exacerbation breathe a little bit better.

1:46.6

So this combo allows for use of a rescue inhaler, a short-acting beta agonist that's going to help

...

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