P258 Role of 7-day and 14-day courses of oral prednisolone treatment in acute exacerbation of COPD
PurposeThe purpose of this study was to compare the efficacy of 7-day and 14-day courses of oral prednisolone treatment in patients with acute exacerbation of COPD with FEV1<50% predicted.MethodsIt was a prospective randomised, single blind study in a tertiary care centre, the study patients were...
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Published in | Thorax Vol. 66; no. Suppl 4; pp. A172 - A173 |
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Main Authors | , |
Format | Journal Article |
Language | English |
Published |
London
BMJ Publishing Group Ltd and British Thoracic Society
01.12.2011
BMJ Publishing Group LTD |
Online Access | Get full text |
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Summary: | PurposeThe purpose of this study was to compare the efficacy of 7-day and 14-day courses of oral prednisolone treatment in patients with acute exacerbation of COPD with FEV1<50% predicted.MethodsIt was a prospective randomised, single blind study in a tertiary care centre, the study patients were included and randomised into two groups: 7-day group received oral prednisolone 30 mg/day for 7 days, and 14-day group was administered the same dosage of oral prednisolone for 14 days. There was no significant difference between the groups for age, smoking pack years, symptoms of COPD in years, no. of previous exacerbations, blood eosinophilia, baseline FEV1, and FVC levels. One patient from 7-day group developed pneumothorax and one from 14-day group died of acute Myocardial Infarction.ResultsBoth groups showed significant improvements of FEV1 and FVC on D-1, D-3, D-5, D-7, D-10 and Day-14 from the baseline (7-day group, p=0.0001, 0.0001, 0.008, 0.009, 0.008, 0.011and 14-day group, p=0.000, 0.000, 0.000, 0.000, 0.000, 0.000) and the improvement of FVC is also significant in both the groups, but there was no significant difference of improvement between the two groups on day-7 and day-14 (p=0.100, 0.079). There was also significant improvement of symptom score from baseline on day-7 and day-14, but no significant difference of improvement between two groups.ConclusionIn acute exacerbation of COPD there is no difference between 7-day and 14-day courses of treatment with oral prednisolone. The peak of FEV1 and FVC in 7-day group on day-10 where corticosteroid was already stopped on day-7, (peak in 14-day group was on day-7) might be due to some other factor/factors responsible which would be cleared by further study.Clinical implicationsThere was no difference between 7-day and 14-day courses of prednisolone treatment, so, 7-day might be the shortest effective course of steroid treatment in acute exacerbation of COPD to avoid the burden of cost and side effects. |
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Bibliography: | ArticleID:thoraxjnl-2011-201054c.258 local:thoraxjnl;66/Suppl_4/A172-c istex:63CB76EE8D9087746DF797357E31963870A425E1 ark:/67375/NVC-ZGNB571D-R href:thoraxjnl-66-A172-3.pdf |
ISSN: | 0040-6376 1468-3296 |
DOI: | 10.1136/thoraxjnl-2011-201054c.258 |