Oral corticosteroids overprescribed in children with asthma
Baylor College of Medicine News Apr 19, 2017
While a short course of oral corticosteroid medication is recommended for the treatment of moderate to severe asthma flare–ups, it is neither recommended nor effective in treating those with minimal to mild asthma exacerbations. In a new study published in the journal Pediatrics, researchers at Baylor College of Medicine found substantial overprescribing of oral corticosteroids in children with asthma.
The goal of this study was to describe patterns of oral corticosteroid prescription in the pediatric population. Researchers also wanted to determine whether different types of providers (pediatric, family medicine or internal medicine) had different rates of prescribing oral corticosteroids.
Dr. Harold Farber, associate professor of pediatrics in the section of pulmonary medicine at Baylor, and colleagues analyzed data from children between 1 and 18 years of age with an asthma diagnosis from January 2011 to January 2016 using a computerized database from Texas ChildrenÂs Health Plan, a health maintenance organization for those eligible for Medicaid or the ChildrenÂs Health Insurance Program. They found that close to half of the children under 5 years of age with an asthma diagnosis had an oral corticosteroid prescription in the previous year and more than 40 percent of children in the older age group with an asthma diagnosis had one or more oral corticosteroid prescriptions in the previous year.
ÂOral corticosteroids are very useful for moderate to severe asthma flare–ups because they shrink the swelling and inflammation in the breathing tubes, help reduce the risk of hospitalizations and reduce the number of days in the hospital, said Farber, also a pulmonologist at Texas ChildrenÂs Hospital and first author of the paper. ÂThey are also very powerful medications with side effects, especially when used frequently.Â
The research also showed that pediatricians prescribed less oral corticosteroids than family medicine or internal medicine providers. When researchers compared those pediatricians who prescribed oral corticosteroids more frequently than others, researchers found minimal differences in asthma–related emergency room visits and no differences in hospitalization rates among their patients.
ÂWe want to make sure the right people have the prescription. In the right situations, oral corticosteroids are useful. In the wrong situation, they are not beneficial and are potentially harmful, just like antibiotics, Farber said.
Farber encourages parents whose children are prescribed with oral corticosteroids for the treatment of mild asthma problems to ask their physician if he/she thinks the child really needs them. Keep in mind that for a moderate or severe asthma attack, oral corticosteroid medication is useful.
Go to Original
The goal of this study was to describe patterns of oral corticosteroid prescription in the pediatric population. Researchers also wanted to determine whether different types of providers (pediatric, family medicine or internal medicine) had different rates of prescribing oral corticosteroids.
Dr. Harold Farber, associate professor of pediatrics in the section of pulmonary medicine at Baylor, and colleagues analyzed data from children between 1 and 18 years of age with an asthma diagnosis from January 2011 to January 2016 using a computerized database from Texas ChildrenÂs Health Plan, a health maintenance organization for those eligible for Medicaid or the ChildrenÂs Health Insurance Program. They found that close to half of the children under 5 years of age with an asthma diagnosis had an oral corticosteroid prescription in the previous year and more than 40 percent of children in the older age group with an asthma diagnosis had one or more oral corticosteroid prescriptions in the previous year.
ÂOral corticosteroids are very useful for moderate to severe asthma flare–ups because they shrink the swelling and inflammation in the breathing tubes, help reduce the risk of hospitalizations and reduce the number of days in the hospital, said Farber, also a pulmonologist at Texas ChildrenÂs Hospital and first author of the paper. ÂThey are also very powerful medications with side effects, especially when used frequently.Â
The research also showed that pediatricians prescribed less oral corticosteroids than family medicine or internal medicine providers. When researchers compared those pediatricians who prescribed oral corticosteroids more frequently than others, researchers found minimal differences in asthma–related emergency room visits and no differences in hospitalization rates among their patients.
ÂWe want to make sure the right people have the prescription. In the right situations, oral corticosteroids are useful. In the wrong situation, they are not beneficial and are potentially harmful, just like antibiotics, Farber said.
Farber encourages parents whose children are prescribed with oral corticosteroids for the treatment of mild asthma problems to ask their physician if he/she thinks the child really needs them. Keep in mind that for a moderate or severe asthma attack, oral corticosteroid medication is useful.
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