| Literature DB >> 31525297 |
Eugene R Bleecker1, Andrew N Menzies-Gow2, David B Price3,4, Arnaud Bourdin5, Stephen Sweet6, Amber L Martin7, Marianna Alacqua8, Trung N Tran9.
Abstract
Systemic corticosteroid use to manage uncontrolled asthma and its associated healthcare burden may account for important health-related adverse effects. We conducted a systematic literature review to investigate the real-world extent and burden of systemic corticosteroid use in asthma. We searched MEDLINE and Embase databases to identify English-language articles published in 2010-2017, using search terms for asthma with keywords for oral corticosteroids and systemic corticosteroids. Observational studies, prescription database analyses, economic analyses, and surveys on oral/systemic corticosteroid use in children (>5 yr old), adolescents (12-17 yr old), and adults with asthma were included. We identified and reviewed 387 full-text articles, and our review included data from 139 studies. The included studies were conducted in Europe, North America, and Asia. Overall, oral/systemic corticosteroids were commonly used for asthma management and were more frequently used in patients with severe asthma than in those with milder disease. Long-term oral/systemic corticosteroid use was, in general, less frequent than short-term use. Compared with no use, long-term and repeated short-term oral/systemic corticosteroid use were associated with an increased risk of acute and chronic adverse events, even when doses were comparatively low. Greater oral/systemic corticosteroid exposure was also associated with increased costs and healthcare resource use. This review provides a comprehensive overview of oral/systemic corticosteroid use and associated adverse events for patients with all degrees of asthma severity and exposure duration. We report that oral/systemic corticosteroid use is prevalent in asthma management, and the risks of acute and chronic complications increase with the cumulative oral corticosteroid dosage.Entities:
Keywords: asthma; oral corticosteroids; severe asthma; systematic literature review; systemic corticosteroids
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 31525297 PMCID: PMC6999108 DOI: 10.1164/rccm.201904-0903SO
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Respir Crit Care Med ISSN: 1073-449X Impact factor: 21.405
Study Selection Criteria for the Systematic Literature Review on the Use of OCS and SCS for Treatment of Asthma
| Category | Inclusion Criteria | Exclusion Criteria |
|---|---|---|
| Population | • Pediatric, adolescent, and adult patients (≥5 yr old) with asthma of any severity and all degrees of disease control | • Children <5 yr old with asthma |
| Intervention/comparators | • OCS, parenteral CS, or SCS | • No mention of OCS, parenteral CS, or SCS use |
| Outcomes | • Frequency/patterns of OCS and SCS use (patient-level data) | • Outcome measures not listed in the inclusion criteria |
| • Clinical burden of OCS and SCS use: | ||
| • Economic burden of OCS and SCS use: | ||
| Study design | • Observational studies, including prospective and retrospective cohort studies, and cross-sectional analyses | • Systematic and narrative reviews |
| Time period | • January 1, 2007, to December 4, 2017 | • Studies published before January 1, 2007, or after December 4, 2017 |
| Other criteria | • Studies published in English | • Non–English language publications |
Definition of abbreviations: ACOS = asthma–chronic obstructive pulmonary disease overlap syndrome; ACQ = Asthma Control Questionnaire; ACT = Asthma Control Test; HCP = healthcare professional; OCS = oral corticosteroids; SCS = systemic corticosteroids.
Figure 1.Flow diagram of the article screening and evaluation process. *“Other” included asthma–chronic obstructive pulmonary disease overlap syndrome (n = 5), letter (n = 4), erratum (n = 2), not English language (n = 2), and retracted publication (n = 1). †“Other” included cost-effectiveness modeling, letter, not patients with asthma, not English language, asthma phenotyping analysis, controlled trial, and retracted publication (each n = 1). ED = emergency department.
Frequency of Long-Term Use of OCS and SCS for Patients with Asthma, Categorized by Disease Severity
| Source | Long-Term OCS/SCS Definition | OCS/SCS Use at Follow-Up/Postindex, % ( | OCS/SCS Use at Baseline/Preindex, % ( | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Any degree of asthma severity | ||||
| Allen-Ramey | 21,199 | An order quantity ≥30 with one or more refills | OCS | — |
| 8.9 (1,883/21,199) | ||||
| Arellano | 6–18 yr: 659,169 | Continuous OCS use >15 d | Addition of long-term OCS in first year in Tx-naive pts initiating Tx with: | — |
| 6–11 yr: 348,991 | SABA ( | |||
| Tx-naive (6–18 yr): 595,619 | ICS ( | |||
| ICS/LABA ( | ||||
| Bottero | 159 | Continuous or near continuous (≥50% of yr) oral prednisone use | OCS | — |
| 9.4 (15/159) | ||||
| Broder | 18,343 (uncontrolled asthma) | Total supply of ≥60 d in a | — | OCS |
| Covvey | 12,319 | >14-d supply with no titration schedule (BTS/SIGN step 5) | 1.2 (149/12,319) | — |
| Dalal | 603,147; | SCS user: ≥6 mo of continuous long-term SCS use | — | Long-term SCS use (overall pop): |
| Dodd and Mazurek, 2018 | 14,915 | Controller therapy | OCS | — |
| % (95% CI) | ||||
| WRA: 5.5 (3.8–7.3) | ||||
| Possible WRA: 3.0 (1.8–4.2) | ||||
| Non-WRA: 2.5 (1.7–3.4) | ||||
| Fardet 2011 ( | 4,518,753 (total) | Tx lasting ≥3 mo | OCS | — |
| Prevalence, % (95% CI): | ||||
| Ferguson | 812 | Long-term OCS | OCS | — |
| 9 (70/812) | ||||
| Hasegawa | 1998: 3,347 | Controller medication | OCS | — |
| 1998: 18.8 | ||||
| 2000: 3,069 | 2000: 12.3 | |||
| 2002: 2,593 | 2002: 10.4 | |||
| 2004: 2,865 | 2004: 7.4 | |||
| 2006: 3,066 | 2006: 7.8 | |||
| 2008: 3,146 | 2008: 5.2 | |||
| Korn 2013 | 280 | Daily OCS maintenance | OCS | — |
| 26.8 (75/280) | ||||
| Vitamin D concentrations | ||||
| 25(OH)D <30 ng/ml (insufficiency): | ||||
| 30.9 (58/188) | ||||
| 25(OH)D ≥30 ng/ml: | ||||
| 18.5 (17/92) | ||||
| Lee | TB cases: 4,136 Matched control subjects: 20,538 | OCS user: cumulative dosage ≥1,680 mg of hydrocortisone equivalents during 1 yr before index date | — | OCS |
| Asthma pts | ||||
| TB cases: 11.2 (54/484) | ||||
| Control subjects: 4.8 (117/2,420) | ||||
| Lefebvre | SCS users: | Daily doses ≥5 mg of prednisone equivalent with no gap of ≥14 d between 2 SCS claims | — | Overall population: 11.9 (3,628/30,615) |
| Luskin | 3,604 (high OCS use) | High OCS use: pts who had a ≥30-d supply of OCS in each study year | OCS | — |
| 5.3 (3,604/67,860) | ||||
| Papaioannou | 171 | Regular/continuous SCS | OCS | — |
| 20.5 (35/171) | ||||
| Price | 2,042 | BTS step 5 | — | OCS |
| 0.5 (10/2,042) | ||||
| Price | 130,547 | BTS step 5 | — | OCS |
| 0.8 (1,080/130,547) | ||||
| Reddy | (257 | Regular OCS | OCS | OCS |
| 5.8 (15/257) | 10.9 (28/257) | |||
| — | ||||
| Sato | 114 | Regular use of OCS | OCS | — |
| 4 (5/114) | ||||
| Shigemura | 126 | Regular OCS | — | OCS |
| Baseline: | ||||
| Tattersall | 667; | Controller medication | — | OCS |
| Overall: 4.8 (32/667) | ||||
| Persistent: 20.5 (32/156) | ||||
| Intermittent: NA | ||||
| Zeiger | 9,546 | Long-term OCS: Average daily dosage ≥2.5 mg in 2010 | Long-term OCS: 8.2 (782/9,546) | — |
| Long-term OCS: 782 | ||||
| GINA step 2 or greater treatment | ||||
| Bengtson | Escalation: 5,044 | ≥90 consecutive days of OCS coverage | Unchanged: 0.2 (52/21,967) | — |
| Before: 0.1 (6/5,044) | ||||
| Hawcutt | 525 | Regular maintenance | 10.8 (47/435) | — |
| Barry 2017 | 7,195; | Severe asthma: regular OCS use | Severe: 100 (808/808) | — |
| Broder 2017 ( | 3,355 | High OCS users: ≥1 OCS fill with ≥30 d of supply or ≥6 bursts of OCS | High OCS use: | — |
| Chipps | 341 | Long-term SCS | 11.2 (37/331) | — |
| Daugherty | 60,418; | SCS user: | 58.6 (35,444/60,418) | 25.6 (15,490/60,418) |
| SCS nonuser: no SCS use at baseline or observation periods | (SCS use during baseline and observation periods) | — | ||
| Denlinger | 709 | Daily OCS | 11.0 (78/709) | — |
| Gibeon | 346 | Maintenance OCS | 42.6 (123/289) | 41.2 (119/289) |
| Lefebvre | 3,628; SCS exposure (mg/d): | Daily SCS dosage ≥5 mg of prednisone equivalent with no gap of ≥14 d between two SCS claims | At index date | — |
| Low SCS: 10 (368/3,628) | ||||
| Maio | 493 | Long-term OCS use | 16.0 (78/488) | — |
| Moore 2011 | 339; | OCS ≥20 mg/d for ≥50% of year | — | Baseline: % |
| Nonsevere: 1 (2/196) | ||||
| Severe: 21 (21/102) | ||||
| Very severe: 80 (33/41) | ||||
| O’Neill | 596; | Maintenance OCS | — | Overall: 34 (201/596) |
| Severe: 38 (196/516) | ||||
| Nonsevere: 5 (6/80) | ||||
| Phipatanakul | 6–17 yr: 188; | ≥3 mo with OCS use in past year | — | 6–17 yr |
| Nonsevere: 1.3 (1/77) | ||||
| Severe: 9.9 (11/111) | ||||
| Adult (≥18 yr): 526; | Adult | |||
| Nonsevere: 0 (0/213) | ||||
| Severe: 22.4 (70/313) | ||||
| Reddy | 228; | Daily OCS use | Current: 28 (11/41) | — |
| Rijssenbeek-Nouwens | 137 | Daily OCS maintenance | Overall: 29.9 (41/137) | Overall: 51.1 (70/137) |
| HDM: 68 | HDM: 22 (15/68); | HDM: 43 (29/68) | ||
| Non-HDM: 69 | Non-HDM: 38 (26/69); | Non-HDM: 59 (41/69) | ||
| SEN: 92 | SEN: 29 (27/92); | SEN: 49 (45/92) | ||
| Non-SEN: 45 | Non-SEN: 31 (14/45); | Non-SEN: 56 (25/45) | ||
| Schleich | 350 | Daily maintenance SCS | 24 (84/350) | — |
| Shaw | 209; | Daily OCS | — | Severe all: 45.5 (181/398) |
| Severe nonsmoker: 45.8 (135/295) | ||||
| Severe ex-smoker: 44.7 (46/103) | ||||
| Mild/moderate: 0 (0/88) | ||||
| Sweeney | 349 | Maintenance OCS | 57 (199/349) | 42 (146/349) |
| Sweeney | 770 | Daily SCS | 57.1 (442/770) | — |
| Tay | 423 | Maintenance OCS | — | 1.4 (6/423) |
| Severe: 4.1 (2/49) | ||||
| Nonsevere: 1.1 (4/374) | ||||
| Westerhof | 153; | Long-term OCS use >50% past yr | — | Current/ex-smoker: 28 (23/83) |
| Never-smoker: 29 (20/70) |
Definition of abbreviations: 25(OH)D = 25-hydroxyvitamin D; BTS = British Thoracic Society; CI = confidence interval; EPR = expert panel report; GINA = Global Initiative for Asthma; HCP = healthcare professional; HDM = house dust mite; ICS = inhaled corticosteroids; LABA = long-acting β2-agonists; NA = not applicable; OCS = oral corticosteroids; pts = patients; SABA = short-acting β2-agonists; SCS = systemic corticosteroids; SEN = sensitized; SIGN = Scottish Intercollegiate Guidelines Network; TB = tuberculosis; Tx = treatment; WRA = work-related asthma.
Studies used a retrospective cohort study design unless otherwise stated.
Patient survey.
Prevalence was determined by dividing the number of person-years with asthma receiving long-term OCS therapy by the total number of person-years with asthma.
Cross-sectional study.
Patient/HCP survey.
Prospective study.
Cases of TB identified after the treatment initiation date were matched with up to five control individuals without TB for age, sex, diagnosis of asthma or chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, and initiation date.
Longitudinal open cohort.
Retrospective matched cohort.
Patients who received tiotropium add-on therapy postindex (dry powder inhaler or soft mist inhaler).
Retrospective cross-sectional and historic cohort.
Patients with asthma who underwent bariatric surgery, consented to and had reached 1 yr of follow-up (n = 606), and returned for a follow-up survey (n = 257).
Prospective/retrospective cohort.
GINA Step 5 treatment and four or more OCS prescriptions per year for each of the two consecutive study years.
Data from TENOR (The Epidemiology and Natural History of Asthma. Outcomes and Treatment Regimens) II, a 10-year follow-up assessment of patients from TENOR I; age criteria provided for inclusion in TENOR I study.
Baseline period: 6 months before index date (date the patient was identified as having severe asthma [GINA Step 4/5]); observation period: follow-up after index date.
Index date was defined as the first day with a daily dosage of ≥5 mg of prednisone or equivalent after the first 6 months of long-term SCS use (baseline period).
High-altitude therapy for patients with severe asthma and without HDM sensitization (HDM and non-HDM groups) and patients with and without any allergic sensitization (sensitized and nonsensitized groups).
Patients with severe asthma at registry baseline assessment. Patients were divided into two groups: those who required daily SCS therapy to maintain asthma control and those who did not require maintenance SCS but required frequent rescue SCS courses.
General OCS and SCS Use for Patients with Asthma, Categorized by Disease Severity
| Source | Sample Size | OCS or SCS Use at Follow-Up/Postindex, % ( | OCS or SCS Use at Baseline/Preindex, % ( |
|---|---|---|---|
| Any degree of asthma severity | |||
| Afshar | 14,012 (all individuals) | OCS | — |
| Asthma prevalence: 7.4% | 8.8 (95% CI, 6.2–11.3) | ||
| Arellano | 6–18 yr: 659,169 | OCS | — |
| 6–11 yr: 348,991 | 6–18 yr: 25.2 (165,783/659,169) | ||
| 6–11 yr: 27.6 (103,292/374,068) | |||
| Black | 74,057 | — | OCS |
| 31.2 | |||
| (23,115/74,057) | |||
| Björnsdóttir | 6,142 | — | OCS |
| 12.7 (783/6,142) | |||
| Butler | 123,868 | OCS | — |
| Jan 2005: 7.3% | |||
| Choi | 831,613 | OCS | — |
| 40.61 | |||
| Cooper | 2,624 | OCS | — |
| 12.0 (314/2,624) | |||
| Delate | 2,360 | SCS | SCS |
| 30.6 (723/2,360) | 35.8 (845/2,360) | ||
| — | |||
| Farber | 5–8 yr: 20,645 | OCS | — |
| 9–12 yr: 14,716 | Rx (2,015) | ||
| 13–17 yr: 11,142 | 5–8 yr ( | ||
| 1: 31.9 (6,580) | |||
| 2: 6.6 (1,371) | |||
| ≥3: 3.5 (720) | |||
| 9–12 yr ( | |||
| 1: 28.2 (4,143) | |||
| 2: 5.3 (781) | |||
| ≥3: 2.2 (317) | |||
| 13–17 yr ( | |||
| 1: 30.1 (3,357) | |||
| 2: 4.3 (484) | |||
| ≥3: 2.4 (269) | |||
| Iribarren | 203,595 | — | OCS |
| 20% | |||
| Laforest | UK: 38,637 | SCS | — |
| Non: 6,996 | Non/low/high ICS | ||
| UK: 6.2%/22.5%/12.7% | |||
| France: 4,587 | |||
| Non: 1,176 | France: 21.9%/36.1%/30.5% | ||
| Lee | 736 | SCS | — |
| 71 (523/736) | |||
| Lin | 24,109 | — | SCS |
| 3 mo: 8.0 (1,926/24,109) | |||
| 12 mo: 22.3 (5,378/24,109) | |||
| Luskin | 67,860 | Any OCS use | — |
| 66.0 (44,764/67,860) | |||
| Walters | 3,320 | — | OCS |
| Cases: 1,660 | Cases: 57.4% | ||
| Control subjects: 1,660 | Control subjects: 42.6% | ||
| Windt and Glaeske, 2010 ( | DMP: 317 | OCS | OCS |
| Not DMP (control): 317 | DMP: 26.5 (84/317) | DMP: 25.9 (82/317) | |
| Not DMP (all): 20,566 | Control: 24.3 (77/317) | Control: 20.5 (65/317) | |
| Not DMP: 25.9 (5,320/20,566) | |||
| Wong | 1,835 | OCS | OCS |
| 48.2 (884/1,835) | 48.1 (882/1,835) | ||
| GINA step 2 or greater treatment | |||
| Ali | 51,103 | — | OCS |
| ICS: 46,928 | Overall: 5.8 (2,976/51,103) | ||
| LABA: 714 | By postindex Tx | ||
| ICS/LABA: 3,461 | ICS: 5.7 (2,673/46,928) | ||
| LABA: 6.4 (46/714) | |||
| ICS/LABA: 7.4 (257/3,461) | |||
| Bengtson | Escalation: 5,044 | OCS | — |
| Unchanged | |||
| 31.9 (7,002/21,967) | |||
| Escalation | |||
| Pre: 29.8 (1,501/5,044) | |||
| Post: 30.7 (1,548/5,044) | |||
| Corrao | 2,335 | OCS | — |
| 18.3 (428/2,335) | |||
| Hagiwara | FP: 469 | SCS | — |
| FSC: 3,881 | Matched | ||
| FP: 32 (143/447) | |||
| FSC: 24 (106/447) | |||
| Hagiwara | 18,283 | SCS | — |
| FSC: 14,044 | Matched | ||
| MF: 4,239 | FSC: 18.1 (688/3,799) | ||
| MF: 20.5 (780/3,799) | |||
| Hagiwara | 7,779 | — | SCS claims and procedures |
| FP: 2,010 | FP: 69 (1,385/2,010) | ||
| FSC: 5,769 | FSC: 73 (4,232/5,769) | ||
| Laforest | 919 | — | OCS |
| Overall: 46.4 (394/849) | |||
| Laforest | 2,162 | OCS | OCS |
| ICS: | 2008, % ( | 2007, % ( | |
| 1,757 | ICS ( | ICS ( | |
| ICS+LTRA: 1,826 | 0 units: 57.4 (1,009) | 0: 52.8 (928) | |
| 1 unit: 22.1 (388) | 1: 24.4 (428) | ||
| 2 units: 10.6 (187) | 2: 11.5 (202) | ||
| ≥3 units: 9.8 (173) | ≥3: 11.3 (199) | ||
| ICS+LTRA ( | ICS+LTRA | ||
| 0 units: 57.7 (1,053) | ( | ||
| 1 unit: 22.1 (403) | 0 units: 53.1 (970) | ||
| 2 units: 10.7 (195) | 1 unit: 24.3 (443) | ||
| ≥3 units: 9.6 (175) | 2 units: 11.4 (209) | ||
| ≥3 units: 11.2 (204) | |||
| Moderate-to-severe or severe asthma | |||
| Broder | 2003: 302 | OCS | — |
| 2004: 970 | 2007 cohort: | ||
| 2005: 1,301 | |||
| 2006: 1,361 | |||
| 2007: 1,382 | |||
| Bruno | 102 | OCS | — |
| 64.7 (66/102) | |||
| DiSantostefano and Davis, 2011 ( | 1,233 | SCS | SCS |
| 1–6 mo: 11% | 7–12 mo: 9% | ||
| 7–12 mo: 10% | 1–6 mo: 19% | ||
| Eisner | 2,878 | — | OCS |
| 51.2 (1,473/2,878) | |||
| Lafeuille | 3,044 | — | OCS |
| 49 (1,479/3,044) | |||
| Lafeuille | 644 | — | 93.5 (602/644) |
| (OCS) | |||
| Sposato | 340 | OCS | — |
| OMB Tx duration | ≤12 mo: 13% | ||
| ≤12 mo: 39 | 12–≤24 mo: 9% | ||
| 12–≤24 mo: 94 | 24–≤60 mo: 6% | ||
| 24–≤60 mo: 171 | >60 mo: 3% | ||
| >60 mo: 36 | |||
| Sullivan | 25,297 | OCS | OCS |
| HDICS: 11,445 | HDICS: 34% | HDICS: 35% | |
| HICS: 6,926 | HICS: 65% | HICS: 53% | |
| OMB: 856 | OMB: 52% | OMB: 63% | |
| Sweeney | 2,670 pts with new ICS/LABA Rx and no prior ICS Rx | — | OCS |
| 5 (132/2,670) | |||
| Turner | 2,660 | OCS | — |
| FDC ICS/LABA: 6.5% | |||
| ICS+LABA: | |||
| 8.8% |
Definition of abbreviations: CI = confidence interval; DMP = disease management program; FDC = fixed-dose combination; FP = fluticasone propionate; FSC = FP/SAL fixed-dose combination inhaler; GINA = Global Initiative for Asthma; HDICS = high-dosage ICS; HICS = high-intensity corticosteroids; ICS = inhaled corticosteroids; LABA = long-acting β2-agonists; LTRA = leukotriene receptor antagonists; MF = mometasone furoate; OCS = oral corticosteroids; OMB = omalizumab; Rx = prescription; SABA = short-acting β2-agonists; SCS = systemic corticosteroids; Tx = treatment.
Groups were defined according to the value of the ICS to total asthma medication ratio in 2008: R = 0% (non-ICS users), 0% < R < 50% (low ICS ratio group), and R ≥ 50% (high ICS ratio group). The ratio constituted the proportion of prescribed units of ICS out of the overall number of respiratory medication units prescribed during 2008.
Patients with asthma and a diagnosis of depression during the study period (cases) were matched to patients with asthma without depression (control subjects) according to the date of asthma diagnosis.
Occasional, intermittent, or continuous ICS/LABA use in baseline period.
Patients in the DMP group were propensity matched with non-DMP control subjects based on a range of variables, including demographics, asthma care/therapy, and comorbidities.
Escalation group: ICS or ICS-containing therapy dosage increase; a switch between ICS, LABA, or LTRA, or add-on of another controller within 12 months after the index date. Unchanged group: patients with ≥1 additional fill indicating continuation of index treatment regimen within 12 months after the index date.
Patients receiving FSC who stepped down to FSC at a smaller dosage of FP or switched to FP only at the same dosage. Patients in the FSC group were matched to those in the FP group through propensity score matching.
Each patient in the FSC group was matched to one patient in the MF group through propensity score techniques.
Based on OCS use in the top 10 medication patterns.
Pharmacist intervention to reduce SABA over-dispensing.