Different durations of corticosteroid therapy for exacerbations of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease

Julia Ae Walters, Daniel J Tan, Clinton J White, Richard Wood-Baker, Julia Ae Walters, Daniel J Tan, Clinton J White, Richard Wood-Baker

Abstract

Background: Current guidelines recommend that patients with acute exacerbations of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) should be treated with systemic corticosteroid for seven to 14 days. Intermittent systemic corticosteroid use is cumulatively associated with adverse effects such as osteoporosis, hyperglycaemia and muscle weakness. Shorter treatment could reduce adverse effects.

Objectives: To compare the efficacy of short-duration (seven or fewer days) and conventional longer-duration (longer than seven days) systemic corticosteroid treatment of adults with acute exacerbations of COPD.

Search methods: Searches were carried out using the Cochrane Airways Group Specialised Register of Trials, MEDLINE and CENTRAL (Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials) and ongoing trials registers up to March 2017.

Selection criteria: Randomised controlled trials comparing different durations of systemic corticosteroid defined as short (i.e. seven or fewer days) or longer (i.e. longer than seven days). Other interventions-bronchodilators and antibiotics-were standardised. Studies with participants requiring assisted ventilation were excluded.

Data collection and analysis: We used standard methodological procedures as expected by The Cochrane Collaboration.

Main results: Eight studies with 582 participants met the inclusion criteria, of which five studies conducted in hospitals with 519 participants (range 28 to 296) contributed to the meta-analysis. Mean ages of study participants were 65 to 73 years, the proportion of male participants varied (58% to 84%) and COPD was classified as severe or very severe. Corticosteroid treatment was given at equivalent daily doses for three to seven days for short-duration treatment and for 10 to 15 days for longer-duration treatment. Five studies administered oral prednisolone (30 mg in four, tapered in one), and two studies provided intravenous corticosteroid treatment. Studies contributing to the meta-analysis were at low risk of selection, performance, detection and attrition bias. In four studies we did not find a difference in risk of treatment failure between short-duration and longer-duration systemic corticosteroid treatment (n = 457; odds ratio (OR) 0.72, 95% confidence interval (CI) 0.36 to 1.46)), which was equivalent to 22 fewer per 1000 for short-duration treatment (95% CI 51 fewer to 34 more). No difference in risk of relapse (a new event) was observed between short-duration and longer-duration systemic corticosteroid treatment (n = 457; OR 1.04, 95% CI 0.70 to 1.56), which was equivalent to nine fewer per 1000 for short-duration treatment (95% CI 68 fewer to 100 more). Time to the next COPD exacerbation did not differ in one large study that was powered to detect non-inferiority and compared five days versus 14 days of systemic corticosteroid treatment (n = 311; hazard ratio 0.95, 95% CI 0.66 to 1.37). In five studies no difference in the likelihood of an adverse event was found between short-duration and longer-duration systemic corticosteroid treatment (n = 503; OR 0.89, 95% CI 0.46 to 1.69, or nine fewer per 1000 (95% CI 44 fewer to 51 more)). Length of hospital stay (n = 421; mean difference (MD) -0.61 days, 95% CI -1.51 to 0.28) and lung function at the end of treatment (n = 185; MD FEV1 -0.04 L; 95% CI -0.19 to 0.10) did not differ between short-duration and longer-duration treatment.

Authors' conclusions: Information from a new large study has increased our confidence that five days of oral corticosteroids is likely to be sufficient for treatment of adults with acute exacerbations of COPD, and this review suggests that the likelihood is low that shorter courses of systemic corticosteroids (of around five days) lead to worse outcomes than are seen with longer (10 to 14 days) courses. We graded most available evidence as moderate in quality because of imprecision; further research may have an important impact on our confidence in the estimates of effect or may change the estimates. The studies in this review did not include people with mild or moderate COPD; further studies comparing short-duration systemic corticosteroid versus conventional longer-duration systemic corticosteroid for treatment of adults with acute exacerbations of COPD are required.

Conflict of interest statement

R Wood‐Baker was chief investigator in a study contributing data to this review. Data from this study were verified and analysed by JAE Walters.

Figures

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1
1 Study flow diagram.
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Risk of bias summary: review authors' judgements about each item for each included study.
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Risk of bias graph: review authors' judgements about each risk of bias item presented as percentages across all included studies.
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Forest plot outcome: treatment failure comparing systemic corticosteroids for ≤ 7 days vs > 7 days.
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Forest plot of comparison: 1 Systemic corticosteroids for 7 or fewer days vs longer than seven days, outcome: 1.2 Relapse.
1.1. Analysis
1.1. Analysis
Comparison 1 Systemic corticosteroids for 7 or fewer days vs longer than 7 days, Outcome 1 Treatment failure.
1.2. Analysis
1.2. Analysis
Comparison 1 Systemic corticosteroids for 7 or fewer days vs longer than 7 days, Outcome 2 Relapse.
1.3. Analysis
1.3. Analysis
Comparison 1 Systemic corticosteroids for 7 or fewer days vs longer than 7 days, Outcome 3 Time to re‐exacerbation.
1.4. Analysis
1.4. Analysis
Comparison 1 Systemic corticosteroids for 7 or fewer days vs longer than 7 days, Outcome 4 Adverse effect—hyperglycaemia.
1.5. Analysis
1.5. Analysis
Comparison 1 Systemic corticosteroids for 7 or fewer days vs longer than 7 days, Outcome 5 Adverse effect—hypertension.
1.6. Analysis
1.6. Analysis
Comparison 1 Systemic corticosteroids for 7 or fewer days vs longer than 7 days, Outcome 6 Other adverse effects—gastrointestinal tract bleeding, symptomatic gastrointestinal reflux, symptoms of congestive heart failure or ischaemic heart disease, sleep disturbance, fractures, depression.
1.7. Analysis
1.7. Analysis
Comparison 1 Systemic corticosteroids for 7 or fewer days vs longer than 7 days, Outcome 7 Mortality.
1.8. Analysis
1.8. Analysis
Comparison 1 Systemic corticosteroids for 7 or fewer days vs longer than 7 days, Outcome 8 Length of hospitalisation.
1.9. Analysis
1.9. Analysis
Comparison 1 Systemic corticosteroids for 7 or fewer days vs longer than 7 days, Outcome 9 FEV1 (L) (early).
1.10. Analysis
1.10. Analysis
Comparison 1 Systemic corticosteroids for 7 or fewer days vs longer than 7 days, Outcome 10 FEV1 % predicted (6 days).
1.11. Analysis
1.11. Analysis
Comparison 1 Systemic corticosteroids for 7 or fewer days vs longer than 7 days, Outcome 11 FVC (L) (early).
1.12. Analysis
1.12. Analysis
Comparison 1 Systemic corticosteroids for 7 or fewer days vs longer than 7 days, Outcome 12 FEV1 (L) end of treatment.
1.13. Analysis
1.13. Analysis
Comparison 1 Systemic corticosteroids for 7 or fewer days vs longer than 7 days, Outcome 13 FEV1 % predicted 30 days.
1.14. Analysis
1.14. Analysis
Comparison 1 Systemic corticosteroids for 7 or fewer days vs longer than 7 days, Outcome 14 FVC (L) end of treatment.
1.15. Analysis
1.15. Analysis
Comparison 1 Systemic corticosteroids for 7 or fewer days vs longer than 7 days, Outcome 15 PaO2 (mmHg) (early).
1.16. Analysis
1.16. Analysis
Comparison 1 Systemic corticosteroids for 7 or fewer days vs longer than 7 days, Outcome 16 PaO2 (mmHg) end of treatment.
1.17. Analysis
1.17. Analysis
Comparison 1 Systemic corticosteroids for 7 or fewer days vs longer than 7 days, Outcome 17 PaCO2 (mmHg).
1.18. Analysis
1.18. Analysis
Comparison 1 Systemic corticosteroids for 7 or fewer days vs longer than 7 days, Outcome 18 Symptoms—dyspnoea (early).
1.19. Analysis
1.19. Analysis
Comparison 1 Systemic corticosteroids for 7 or fewer days vs longer than 7 days, Outcome 19 Symptoms—dyspnoea (15 days).
1.20. Analysis
1.20. Analysis
Comparison 1 Systemic corticosteroids for 7 or fewer days vs longer than 7 days, Outcome 20 Quality of life—overall (6 days).
1.21. Analysis
1.21. Analysis
Comparison 1 Systemic corticosteroids for 7 or fewer days vs longer than 7 days, Outcome 21 Quality of life—overall (30 days).

Source: PubMed

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