EBQ:Single Dose Dexamethasone in Asthma
incomplete Journal Club Article
Altamimi S. et al. "Single-dose oral dexamethasone in the emergency management of children with exacerbations of mild to moderate asthma". Pediatric Emergency Care. 2006. 786-793(22):12.
PubMed Full text PDF
PubMed Full text PDF
Clinical Question
How does a of a single dose of oral dexamethasone compare with 5 days of twice-daily prednisolone in the treatment of mild to moderate asthma exacerbations in children seen in the emergency department?
Conclusion
A single dose of oral dexamethasone (0.6 mg/kg) is no worse than 5 days of twice-daily prednisolone (1 mg/kg per dose) in the management of children with mild to moderate asthma exacerbations.
Major Points
Study Design
- Prospective, randomized, double-blinded trial conducted at British Columbia Children's Hospital
- All children presenting to the ED with mild to moderate asthma exacerbations were assessed by the emergency attending physician who decided if the child needed treatment with salbutamol
- Before starting treatment, PIS, vital signs, oxygen saturation, and peak expiratory flow rate (if pt ≥6 years old) were recorded
- Pt reasssesed 20 minutes after first salbutamol, and if further treatment was needed the patient was consented to study
- All patients received second and third salbutamol 20 minutes apart
- Decision to give more salbutamol after third dose was up to discretion of attending
Population
Patient Demographics
Inclusion Criteria
- 2-16 years old who presented to the ED with acute mild to moderate asthma exacerbation
- Mild to moderate asthma exacerbation defined as a Pulmonary Index Score (PIS) of less than 9 or a PEFR ≥ 60% of predicted value by height
- History of at least 1 prior episode of ‘‘asthma-like’’ acute shortness of breath or wheezing that was treated with salbutamol
Exclusion Criteria
- Signs of severe asthma on presentation
- PEFR < 60%, PIS ≥ 10
- Complete recovery after first salbutamol therapy
- Use of oral steroids in the last 2 weeks
- History of severe asthma exacerbation, including prior intubation or ICU admission for asthma
- Chronic lung disease
- Heart disease
- Neurological disorder
- Psychiatric disease
- History of acute allergic reaction
- Active chickenpox or herpes simplex infections
Interventions
- Patients received single-dose oral dexamethasone (0.6 mg/kg to a maximum of 18 mg) or oral prednisolone (1 mg/kg per dose to a maximum of 30 mg)
twice daily for 5 days
- Pts were contacted by telephone at 48 hrs to assess symptoms and reevaluated in the ED in 5 days
Outcomes
Primary Outcome
- Primary outcome was number of days needed for Patient Self Assessment Score to return to baseline (score of 0-0.5)
- Mean was 5.21 vs. 5.22 days (Dex vs. Pred)
Secondary Outcomes
- Mean time to discharge: 3.5 hours vs. 4.3 hours
- Initial admission rate: 9% vs. 13.4%
- Re-admission rate after initial discharge: 4.9% vs. 1.8%
- Overall hospital admission rate: 13.4% vs. 14.9%
- No significant difference in the number of salbutamol therapies needed in the ED nor at home after discharge
