AI Article Synopsis

  • This study examined whether patients with mild asthma could safely stop long-term inhaled corticosteroid therapy during stable phases of their condition.
  • The research involved comparing two groups: one that had recently stopped inhaled corticosteroids and another that had not used them in the preceding year, focusing on outcomes like asthma exacerbations and lung function.
  • Findings revealed that many patients who stopped corticosteroids experienced deteriorating symptoms and a greater decline in lung function compared to those who continued without steroids, suggesting a more cautious approach is needed for treatment discontinuation.

Article Abstract

Background: This study investigated if long-term therapy with inhaled corticosteroids could be discontinued in mild asthma when patients are in a clinically stable phase of the disease. Data were derived from a 2-year randomized, controlled, bronchodilator intervention study in family practice.

Methods: The experimental (stop-steroid) group consisted of 19 asthmatic patients who had used inhaled corticosteroids daily during at least the year preceding this study and who stopped using these drugs because of participation in the bronchodilator intervention study. The control (no-steroid) group consisted of 70 patients with asthma who had not used corticosteroids in the year preceding the study. At the start of the study (8 weeks after stopping steroids), the two groups were completely comparable in all other relevant characteristics. During the 2-year study, patients were treated only with a bronchodilator (salbutamol or ipratropium bromide). Outcome measures were: exacerbations, symptoms, annual decline in forced expiratory volume in 1 second (FEV1), annual change in nonspecific bronchial responsiveness (PC20-histamine), and the need for additional corticosteroid therapy because of symptoms of increased airway obstruction.

Results: In the stop-steroid group, 12 of 19 patients (63%) dropped out during the study period because of a deterioration of their clinical condition and need for additional (inhaled) corticosteroid treatment. In the no-steroid group, only eight patients dropped out for this reason (11%). In the stop-steroid group, who did not use steroids for at least 1 year, the annual FEV1 decline was much larger than in the comparison subjects (165 vs 40 ml/yr).

Conclusions: Stopping maintenance treatment with inhaled corticosteroids may not be advisable in all patients with mild asthma. Instead of stopping or interrupting treatment, family physicians are advised to determine the minimal effective daily dose of inhaled corticosteroids for each individual patient that provides adequate control of the disease.

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