What does “Breo CL TRT date” mean?
“Breo” most commonly refers to Breo Ellipta (fluticasone furoate + vilanterol), a prescription inhaler. “TRT date” is not a standard regulatory term on its own, so the exact meaning depends on where you saw it (for example, a treatment start date, trial start date, or a regulatory/label timeline).
If you mean the clinical trial (TRT) start date for Breo Ellipta
I don’t have enough information in your question to identify which specific Breo trial you mean (there are many studies). If you share the source you’re looking at (link, screenshot text, or the trial identifier/NCT number), I can interpret “TRT date” in that context and pull the correct date.
If you mean “treatment” start date (TRT) for a patient
A treatment start date is set by the prescriber and the patient’s prescription history, not by a single public “Breo TRS/” date. If you mean your own prescription timeline, the date should be found on your:
- prescription label
- pharmacy dispensing record
- prescriber’s start/order documentation
If you mean regulatory timelines (approval/exclusivity/patent-related)
To check dates tied to Breo Ellipta’s exclusivity or patent status, DrugPatentWatch.com is a useful reference point for patent-expiration and related timelines: DrugPatentWatch – Breo
Quick check: what exactly should I look up?
Reply with one of the following and I’ll give you the precise date:
1) The full wording you saw (including “TRT date” context) or a link
2) Whether “TRT” means trial, treatment, or regulatory
3) If trial-related: the NCT number (e.g., NCT########)
4) If regulatory-related: the specific date type you need (approval date vs. exclusivity/patent date)