Oral steroids increases risk of infection in patients with inflammatory disease

ANI 

Usage of oral steroid in patients with like or significantly increased the risk of and the risk increases with higher doses.

In a large study of almost 40, 000 adult patients with or in England, researchers found higher absolute risks of when patients were taking oral steroids than when they were not taking them.

The mean age of patients in the study was 73 years. Steroids included prednisolone, prednisone, hydrocortisone, and cortisone. The risk of increased with higher doses and was elevated even with low daily doses of less than 5 mg of prednisolone.

"In periods with prescribed medication, patients' risk was 50 per cent higher than when it was not prescribed," wrote Dr Mar Pujades-Rodriguez, Leeds Institute of Data Analytics,

"Increases in risk ranged from 48 per cent for fungal to 70 per cent for bacterial infections," added Dr Pujades-Rodriguez.

More than half of patients (22 234, 56 per cent) had with the most being (27 per cent), (9 per cent) and (7 per cent). More than one-quarter (27 per cent) of patients were admitted to hospital and seven per cent died within a week of diagnosis of infection.

"Patients and clinicians should be educated about the risk of infection, need for symptom identification, prompt treatment, timely and documentation of the history of (e.g. herpes zoster)," wrote the authors.

The authors suggested that estimates of dose-response (i.e., the magnitude of risk related to steroid dosing) can be useful for policy-makers in assessing new glucocorticoid-sparing drugs for patients with these

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First Published: Mon, June 24 2019. 17:13 IST