Abstract
ObjectiveAdverse events (AEs) associated with short-term corticosteroid use for respiratory conditions in young children.DesignSystematic review of primary studies.Data sourcesMedline, Cochrane CENTRAL, Embase and regulatory agencies were searched September 2014; search was updated in 2017.Eligibility criteriaChildren <6 years with acute respiratory condition, given inhaled (high-dose) or systemic corticosteroids up to 14 days.Data extraction and synthesisOne reviewer extracted with another reviewer verifying data. Study selection and methodological quality (McHarm scale) involved duplicate independent reviews. We extracted AEs reported by study authors and used a categorisation model by organ systems. Meta-analyses used Peto ORs (pORs) and DerSimonian Laird inverse variance method utilising Mantel-Haenszel Q statistic, with 95% CI. Subgroup analyses were conducted for respiratory condition and dose.ResultsEighty-five studies (11 505 children) were included; 68 were randomised trials. Methodological quality was poor overall due to lack of assessment and inadequate reporting of AEs. Meta-analysis (six studies; n=1373) found fewer cases of vomiting comparing oral dexamethasone with prednisone (pOR 0.29, 95% CI 0.17 to 0.48; I2=0%). The mean difference in change-from-baseline height after one year between inhaled corticosteroid and placebo was 0.10 cm (two studies, n=268; 95% CI −0.47 to 0.67). Results from five studies with heterogeneous interventions, comparators and measurements were not pooled; one study found a smaller mean change in height z-score with recurrent high-dose inhaled fluticasone over one year. No significant differences were found comparing systemic or inhaled corticosteroid with placebo, or between corticosteroids, for other AEs; CIs around estimates were often wide, due to small samples and few events.ConclusionsEvidence suggests that short-term high-dose inhaled or systemic corticosteroids use is not associated with an increase in AEs across organ systems. Uncertainties remain, particularly for recurrent use and growth outcomes, due to low study quality, poor reporting and imprecision.
Funder
Canadian Institutes of Health Research
Reference118 articles.
1. Corticosteroids in Respiratory Diseases in Children
2. Croup;BMJ Clin Evid,2009
3. Glucocorticoids for croup;Cochrane Database Syst Rev,2011
4. Fluticasone at different doses for chronic asthma in adults and children;Cochrane Database Syst Rev,2008
5. Effect of Inhaled Glucocorticoids in Childhood on Adult Height
Cited by
32 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献