Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology: Global (May 2024)

Longitudinal patterns of intermittent oral corticosteroid therapy for asthma in the United Kingdom

  • Trung N. Tran, MD, PhD,
  • Heath Heatley, PhD,
  • Jennifer Rowell, MSc,
  • Jeffrey Shi Kai Chan, MBChB, MPH,
  • Arnaud Bourdin, MD, PhD,
  • Jatin Chapaneri, MD,
  • Benjamin Emmanuel, PhD,
  • Danny Gibson, MSc,
  • David J. Jackson, MRCP,
  • Andrew N. Menzies-Gow, FRCPi,
  • Ruth Murray, PhD,
  • Derek Skinner, MSc,
  • David B. Price, FRCGP

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 3, no. 2
p. 100225

Abstract

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Background: Increasing frequency of intermittent oral corticosteroid (OCS) prescription and cumulative OCS exposure increase the risk of OCS-related adverse outcomes. Objective: We sought to describe the evolution and trajectory of intermittent OCS prescription patterns in patients with asthma and investigate risk factors independently associated with transitioning to a frequent prescription pattern. Methods: This historical cohort study included patients with active asthma managed in UK primary care and included in the Optimum Patient Care Research Database (OPCRD; opcrd.co.uk). Intermittent OCS prescription patterns were categorized as sporadic, infrequent, moderately frequent, or frequent. Prescription pattern sequences were described for those who had a frequent sequence in their final year of prescribing. We examined associations between OCS prescription pattern and the hazard of transitioning into a frequent intermittent OCS prescription pattern using multivariable Cox regression with a 10-year look-back period. Results: Of 105,229 patients with intermittent OCS prescriptions, 57.1% (n = 60,083) had a frequent OCS prescription pattern at some point. Irrespective of baseline pattern, most patients transitioned to frequent prescription during the look back. The strongest risk factors were a more frequent prescription pattern at the start of look-back period, a lower percentage peak expiratory flow rate, and higher Global Initiative for Asthma treatment step. Older age, female sex, obesity, and active smoking were also associated with a higher risk of transitioning. Conclusion: Our findings help identify those most at risk of transitioning to frequent intermittent OCS receipt and encourage earlier intervention with OCS-sparing treatments.

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