Inhaled corticosteroids in children with persistent asthma: dose-response effects on growth

Aniela I Pruteanu, Bhupendrasinh F Chauhan, Linjie Zhang, Sílvio OM Prietsch, Francine M Ducharme
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Their potential for growth suppression remains a matter of concern for parents and physicians.</p>\n </section>\n \n <section>\n \n <h3> Objectives</h3>\n \n <p>To assess whether increasing the dose of ICS is associated with slower linear growth, weight gain and skeletal maturation in children with asthma.</p>\n </section>\n \n <section>\n \n <h3> Search methods</h3>\n \n <p>We searched the Cochrane Airways Group Specialised Register of trials (CAGR) and the ClinicalTrials.gov website up to March 2014.</p>\n </section>\n \n <section>\n \n <h3> Selection criteria</h3>\n \n <p>Studies were eligible if they were parallel-group randomised trials evaluating the impact of different doses of the same ICS using the same device in both groups for a minimum of three months in children one to 17 years of age with persistent asthma.</p>\n </section>\n \n <section>\n \n <h3> Data collection and analysis</h3>\n \n <p>Two review authors ascertained methodological quality independently using the Cochrane Risk of bias tool. The primary outcome was linear growth velocity. Secondary outcomes included change over time in growth velocity, height, weight, body mass index and skeletal maturation.</p>\n </section>\n \n <section>\n \n <h3> Main results</h3>\n \n <p>Among 22 eligible trials, 17 group comparisons were derived from 10 trials (3394 children with mild to moderate asthma), measured growth and contributed data to the meta-analysis. Trials used ICS (beclomethasone, budesonide, ciclesonide, fluticasone or mometasone) as monotherapy or as combination therapy with a long-acting beta<sub>2</sub>-agonist and generally compared low (50 to 100 μg) versus low to medium (200 μg) doses of hydrofluoroalkane (HFA)-beclomethasone equivalent over 12 to 52 weeks. In the four comparisons reporting linear growth over 12 months, a significant group difference was observed, clearly indicating lower growth velocity in the higher ICS dose group of 5.74 cm/y compared with 5.94 cm/y on lower-dose ICS (N = 728 school-aged children; mean difference (MD)0.20 cm/y, 95% confidence interval (CI) 0.02 to 0.39; high-quality evidence): No statistically significant heterogeneity was noted between trials contributing data. The ICS molecules (ciclesonide, fluticasone, mometasone) used in these four comparisons did not significantly influence the magnitude of effect (X<sup>2</sup> = 2.19 (2 df), P value 0.33). Subgroup analyses on age, baseline severity of airway obstruction, ICS dose and concomitant use of non-steroidal antiasthmatic drugs were not performed because of similarity across trials or inadequate reporting. A statistically significant group difference was noted in unadjusted change in height from zero to three months (nine comparisons; N = 944 children; MD 0.15, 95% CI -0.28 to -0.02; moderate-quality evidence) in favour of a higher ICS dose. No statistically significant group differences in change in height were observed at other time points, nor were such differences in weight, bone mass index and skeletal maturation reported with low quality of evidence due to imprecision.</p>\n </section>\n \n <section>\n \n <h3> Authors' conclusions</h3>\n \n <p>In prepubescent school-aged children with mild to moderate persistent asthma, a small but statistically significant group difference in growth velocity was observed between low doses of ICS and low to medium doses of HFA-beclomethasone equivalent, favouring the use of low-dose ICS. No apparent difference in the magnitude of effect was associated with three molecules reporting one-year growth velocity, namely, mometasone, ciclesonide and fluticasone. In view of prevailing parents' and physicians' concerns about the growth suppressive effect of ICS, lack of or incomplete reporting of growth velocity in more than 86% (19/22) of eligible paediatric trials, including those using beclomethasone and budesonide, is a matter of concern. All future paediatric trials comparing different doses of ICS with or without placebo should systematically document growth. Findings support use of the minimal effective ICS dose in children with asthma.</p>\n </section>\n \n <section>\n \n <h3> PLAIN LANGUAGE SUMMARY</h3>\n \n <p><b>Does altering the dose of inhaled corticosteroids make a difference in growth among children with asthma?</b></p>\n \n <p><b>Background</b></p>\n \n <p>Asthma guidelines recommend inhaled corticosteroids (ICS) as the first choice of treatment for children with persistent asthma that is not well controlled when only a reliever inhaler is used to treat symptoms. Steroids work by reducing inflammation in the lungs and are known to control underlying symptoms of asthma. However, parents and physicians remain concerned about the potential negative effect of ICS on growth.</p>\n \n <p><b>Review question</b></p>\n \n <p>Does altering the dose of inhaled corticosteroids make a difference in the growth of children with asthma?</p>\n \n <p><b>What evidence did we find?</b></p>\n \n <p>We studied whether a difference could be seen in the growth of children with persistent asthma who were using different doses of the same ICS molecule and the same delivery device. We found 22 eligible trials, but only 10 of them measured growth or other measures of interest. Overall, 3394 children included in the review combined 17 group comparisons (i.e. 17 groups of children with mild to moderate asthma using a particular dose and type of steroid in 10 trials). Trials used different ICS molecules (beclomethasone, budesonide, ciclesonide, fluticasone or mometasone) either on their own or in combination with a long-acting beta<sub>2</sub>-agonist (a drug used to open up the airways) and generally compared low doses of corticosteroids (50 to 100 μg) with low to medium (200 μg) doses of corticosteroids (converted in μg HFA-beclomethasone equivalent) over 12 to 52 weeks.</p>\n \n <p><b>Results</b></p>\n \n <p>We found a small but statistically significant group difference in growth over 12 months between these different doses clearly favouring the lower dose of ICS. The type of corticosteroid among newer molecules (ciclesonide, fluticasone, mometasone) did not seem to influence the impact on growth over one year. Differences in corticosteroid doses did not seem to affect the change in height, the gain in weight, the gain in bone mass index and the maturation of bones.</p>\n \n <p><b>Quality of the evidence</b></p>\n \n <p>This review is based on a small number of trials that reported data and were conducted on children with mild to moderate asthma. Only 10 of 22 studies measured the few outcomes of interest for this review, and only four comparisons reported growth over 12 months. Our confidence in the quality of evidence is high for this outcome, however it is low to moderate for several other outcomes, depending on the number of trials reporting these outcomes. Moreover, a few outcomes were reported only by a single trial; as these findings have not been confirmed by other trials, we downgraded the evidence for these outcomes to low quality. An insufficient number of trials have compared the effect of a larger difference in dose, for example, between a high dose and a low dose of ICS and of other popular molecules such as budesonide and beclomethasone over a year or longer of treatment.</p>\n \n <p><b>Conclusions</b></p>\n \n <p>We report an evidence-based ICS dose–dependent reduction in growth velocity in prepubescent school-aged children with mild to moderate persistent asthma. The choice of ICS molecule (mometasone, ciclesonide or fluticasone) was not found to affect the level of growth velocity response over a year. The effect of corticosteroids on growth was not consistently reported: among 22 eligible trials, only four comparisons reported the effects of corticosteroids on growth over one year. In view of parents' and clinicians' concerns, lack of or incomplete reporting of growth is a matter of concern given the importance of the topic. We recommend that growth be systematically reported in all trials involving children taking ICS for three months or longer. 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引用次数: 70

Abstract

Background

Inhaled corticosteroids (ICS) are the first-line treatment for children with persistent asthma. Their potential for growth suppression remains a matter of concern for parents and physicians.

Objectives

To assess whether increasing the dose of ICS is associated with slower linear growth, weight gain and skeletal maturation in children with asthma.

Search methods

We searched the Cochrane Airways Group Specialised Register of trials (CAGR) and the ClinicalTrials.gov website up to March 2014.

Selection criteria

Studies were eligible if they were parallel-group randomised trials evaluating the impact of different doses of the same ICS using the same device in both groups for a minimum of three months in children one to 17 years of age with persistent asthma.

Data collection and analysis

Two review authors ascertained methodological quality independently using the Cochrane Risk of bias tool. The primary outcome was linear growth velocity. Secondary outcomes included change over time in growth velocity, height, weight, body mass index and skeletal maturation.

Main results

Among 22 eligible trials, 17 group comparisons were derived from 10 trials (3394 children with mild to moderate asthma), measured growth and contributed data to the meta-analysis. Trials used ICS (beclomethasone, budesonide, ciclesonide, fluticasone or mometasone) as monotherapy or as combination therapy with a long-acting beta2-agonist and generally compared low (50 to 100 μg) versus low to medium (200 μg) doses of hydrofluoroalkane (HFA)-beclomethasone equivalent over 12 to 52 weeks. In the four comparisons reporting linear growth over 12 months, a significant group difference was observed, clearly indicating lower growth velocity in the higher ICS dose group of 5.74 cm/y compared with 5.94 cm/y on lower-dose ICS (N = 728 school-aged children; mean difference (MD)0.20 cm/y, 95% confidence interval (CI) 0.02 to 0.39; high-quality evidence): No statistically significant heterogeneity was noted between trials contributing data. The ICS molecules (ciclesonide, fluticasone, mometasone) used in these four comparisons did not significantly influence the magnitude of effect (X2 = 2.19 (2 df), P value 0.33). Subgroup analyses on age, baseline severity of airway obstruction, ICS dose and concomitant use of non-steroidal antiasthmatic drugs were not performed because of similarity across trials or inadequate reporting. A statistically significant group difference was noted in unadjusted change in height from zero to three months (nine comparisons; N = 944 children; MD 0.15, 95% CI -0.28 to -0.02; moderate-quality evidence) in favour of a higher ICS dose. No statistically significant group differences in change in height were observed at other time points, nor were such differences in weight, bone mass index and skeletal maturation reported with low quality of evidence due to imprecision.

Authors' conclusions

In prepubescent school-aged children with mild to moderate persistent asthma, a small but statistically significant group difference in growth velocity was observed between low doses of ICS and low to medium doses of HFA-beclomethasone equivalent, favouring the use of low-dose ICS. No apparent difference in the magnitude of effect was associated with three molecules reporting one-year growth velocity, namely, mometasone, ciclesonide and fluticasone. In view of prevailing parents' and physicians' concerns about the growth suppressive effect of ICS, lack of or incomplete reporting of growth velocity in more than 86% (19/22) of eligible paediatric trials, including those using beclomethasone and budesonide, is a matter of concern. All future paediatric trials comparing different doses of ICS with or without placebo should systematically document growth. Findings support use of the minimal effective ICS dose in children with asthma.

PLAIN LANGUAGE SUMMARY

Does altering the dose of inhaled corticosteroids make a difference in growth among children with asthma?

Background

Asthma guidelines recommend inhaled corticosteroids (ICS) as the first choice of treatment for children with persistent asthma that is not well controlled when only a reliever inhaler is used to treat symptoms. Steroids work by reducing inflammation in the lungs and are known to control underlying symptoms of asthma. However, parents and physicians remain concerned about the potential negative effect of ICS on growth.

Review question

Does altering the dose of inhaled corticosteroids make a difference in the growth of children with asthma?

What evidence did we find?

We studied whether a difference could be seen in the growth of children with persistent asthma who were using different doses of the same ICS molecule and the same delivery device. We found 22 eligible trials, but only 10 of them measured growth or other measures of interest. Overall, 3394 children included in the review combined 17 group comparisons (i.e. 17 groups of children with mild to moderate asthma using a particular dose and type of steroid in 10 trials). Trials used different ICS molecules (beclomethasone, budesonide, ciclesonide, fluticasone or mometasone) either on their own or in combination with a long-acting beta2-agonist (a drug used to open up the airways) and generally compared low doses of corticosteroids (50 to 100 μg) with low to medium (200 μg) doses of corticosteroids (converted in μg HFA-beclomethasone equivalent) over 12 to 52 weeks.

Results

We found a small but statistically significant group difference in growth over 12 months between these different doses clearly favouring the lower dose of ICS. The type of corticosteroid among newer molecules (ciclesonide, fluticasone, mometasone) did not seem to influence the impact on growth over one year. Differences in corticosteroid doses did not seem to affect the change in height, the gain in weight, the gain in bone mass index and the maturation of bones.

Quality of the evidence

This review is based on a small number of trials that reported data and were conducted on children with mild to moderate asthma. Only 10 of 22 studies measured the few outcomes of interest for this review, and only four comparisons reported growth over 12 months. Our confidence in the quality of evidence is high for this outcome, however it is low to moderate for several other outcomes, depending on the number of trials reporting these outcomes. Moreover, a few outcomes were reported only by a single trial; as these findings have not been confirmed by other trials, we downgraded the evidence for these outcomes to low quality. An insufficient number of trials have compared the effect of a larger difference in dose, for example, between a high dose and a low dose of ICS and of other popular molecules such as budesonide and beclomethasone over a year or longer of treatment.

Conclusions

We report an evidence-based ICS dose–dependent reduction in growth velocity in prepubescent school-aged children with mild to moderate persistent asthma. The choice of ICS molecule (mometasone, ciclesonide or fluticasone) was not found to affect the level of growth velocity response over a year. The effect of corticosteroids on growth was not consistently reported: among 22 eligible trials, only four comparisons reported the effects of corticosteroids on growth over one year. In view of parents' and clinicians' concerns, lack of or incomplete reporting of growth is a matter of concern given the importance of the topic. We recommend that growth be systematically reported in all trials involving children taking ICS for three months or longer. Until further data comparing low versus high ICS dose and trials of longer duration are available, we recommend that the minimal effective ICS dose be used in all children with asthma.

持续性哮喘儿童吸入皮质类固醇:对生长的剂量反应效应
背景:吸入皮质类固醇(ICS)是儿童持续性哮喘的一线治疗方法。它们抑制生长的潜力仍然是家长和医生关注的问题。目的评估ICS剂量增加是否与哮喘儿童线性生长、体重增加和骨骼成熟减慢有关。检索方法我们检索了截至2014年3月的Cochrane Airways Group specialized Register of trials (CAGR)和ClinicalTrials.gov网站。如果研究是平行组随机试验,评估两组使用相同装置使用不同剂量的相同ICS对1至17岁持续性哮喘儿童至少三个月的影响,则研究符合条件。资料收集和分析两位综述作者使用Cochrane偏倚风险工具独立确定方法学质量。主要观察指标为线性生长速度。次要结果包括生长速度、身高、体重、身体质量指数和骨骼成熟度随时间的变化。在22项符合条件的试验中,17组比较来自10项试验(3394名轻度至中度哮喘儿童),测量了生长并为荟萃分析提供了数据。试验使用ICS(倍氯米松、布地奈德、环来奈德、氟替卡松或莫米松)作为单一疗法或与长效β - 2激动剂联合疗法,通常比较低剂量(50至100 μg)与低至中剂量(200 μg)的氢氟烷烃-倍氯米松当量,持续12至52周。在报告12个月内线性生长的4个比较中,观察到显著的组差异,清楚地表明高剂量ICS组的生长速度为5.74 cm/y,低于低剂量ICS组的5.94 cm/y (N = 728学龄儿童;平均差(MD)0.20 cm/y, 95%置信区间(CI) 0.02 ~ 0.39;高质量证据):在提供数据的试验之间没有发现统计学上显著的异质性。在这四种比较中使用的ICS分子(环来奈德、氟替卡松、莫米松)对效果的大小没有显著影响(X2 = 2.19 (2 df), P值0.33)。由于各试验相似或报告不充分,未进行年龄、气道阻塞基线严重程度、ICS剂量和同时使用非甾体类平喘药的亚组分析。从零到三个月,未调整的身高变化有统计学意义的组间差异(9个比较;N = 944例;MD 0.15, 95% CI -0.28 ~ -0.02;中等质量证据)支持较高的ICS剂量。在其他时间点未观察到身高变化的组间差异有统计学意义,体重、骨量指数和骨骼成熟度的差异也没有报道,由于不精确,证据质量较低。作者的结论:在患有轻度至中度持续性哮喘的青春期前学龄儿童中,观察到低剂量ICS和中低剂量hfa -倍氯米松当量在生长速度上存在小但有统计学意义的组差异,这有利于使用低剂量ICS。莫米松、环替奈德和氟替卡松这三种分子报告一年生长速度的影响程度没有明显差异。鉴于普遍存在的家长和医生对ICS生长抑制作用的担忧,超过86%(19/22)的符合条件的儿科试验(包括使用倍氯米松和布地奈德的试验)缺乏或不完整的生长速度报告令人担忧。未来所有比较不同剂量ICS与安慰剂或无安慰剂的儿科试验都应系统地记录生长。研究结果支持在哮喘儿童中使用最小有效ICS剂量。改变吸入皮质类固醇的剂量对哮喘儿童的生长有影响吗?背景:哮喘指南推荐,当仅使用缓解吸入器治疗症状时,吸入皮质类固醇(ICS)作为无法很好控制的持续性哮喘儿童的首选治疗方法。类固醇通过减少肺部炎症起作用,并且已知可以控制哮喘的潜在症状。
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