Part one

TAYSIDE PRESCRIBER
Issue 107
GUIDANCE ON STEROID TREATMENT CARDS WITH INHALED STEROIDS

Steroid treatment cards give guidance on minimising associated risks of therapy with corticosteroids and
provide details of the prescriber, drug, dosage and duration of treatment.1, 2 They also contain instructions to
the patient and inform healthcare professionals that a patient is receiving steroid treatment if presented by
the patient.1
Guidance from the Scottish Executive1 highlighting the importance of steroid treatment cards, advised that
pharmacists dispensing systemic corticosteroids OR high doses of inhaled steroids should check that the
patient has been given a steroid treatment card and, if not, issue one if they consider it appropriate.
Consideration should also be given to patients being treated with steroids by other routes e.g. oral, topical,
and nasal. Please refer to Part Two of this Prescriber overleaf for information on systemic steroids and
steroid cards.
The BNF2 and BNF for children3 state that a steroid card should be given with high doses of beclometasone,
budesonide or fluticasone inhalers.

The Tayside Respiratory MCN has clarified this as follows:
Give adults a steroid card when:
The dose of beclometasone or budesonide is greater than 800 micrograms daily. This also applies
The dose of fluticasone is greater than 400 micrograms daily.
There is little evidence that doses below 800 micrograms per day of beclometasone or equivalent cause any
short-term detrimental effects other than local effects of hoarseness and oral candidiasis. The dose of
inhaled steroid should be titrated to the lowest dose at which effective control is maintained
. 7
Give children a steroid card when:
The dose of beclometasone or budesonide is 200 micrograms or greater twice a day.
The dose of fluticasone is 100 micrograms or greater twice a day.

Administration of inhaled steroids at or above 400 micrograms per day of beclometasone or equivalent may
be associated with systemic side effects including growth failure and adrenal suppression. The lowest dose
of inhaled steroids compatible with maintaining disease control should be used and therapy should
be reviewed regularly.
7,8,9
Children’s height should be monitored on a regular basis. In Tayside the short Synacthen test should be
carried out in all children on beclometasone 500mcg daily or above and fluticasone 250micrograms daily or
above. This should be repeated at annual intervals if the child remains on high doses.
Prescribers have been strongly advised by the CSM that paediatric licensed doses of all inhaled
corticosteroids should not be exceeded without specialist referral
.9
ORAL CORTICOSTEROIDS, ADRENAL INSUFFICIENCY
AND STEROID CARDS

Prepared by Ewan Pearson, Diabetes & Endocrinology Consultant.

Physiological corticosteroid secretion
Normal cortisol secretion is lower than previously thought, comparable to around 15mg to 20mg of hydrocortisone
daily. Secretion of cortisol is at its greatest in the morning and falls off during the day. As a result, physiological
replacement is usually given as 10mg oral hydrocortisone at breakfast and 5mg at teatime. Maximum adrenal
cortisol production is around 300mg/day, although it is rare that this exceeds 150mg/day even in patients undergoing
major surgery.
Adrenal insufficiency
Adrenal insufficiency can be:
Primary, due to adrenal disease such as Addison’s disease or congenital adrenal
Secondary due to hypothalamo-pituitary disease such as a pituitary adenoma, head injury or post
Secondary to exogenous corticosteroid use.
KEY POINT
It is important to exclude secondary causes in people found to be hypoadrenal following a
Synacthen test. For more information on this test

Adrenal suppression secondary to corticosteroid use
Exogenous corticosteroids rapidly suppress the hypothalamo-pituitary axis. Prolonged use results in adrenal cortical
atrophy. Long-term treatment with doses of corticosteroids greater than 5 mg prednisolone daily (or equivalent *) can
result in adrenal suppression for more than one year.
KEY POINT
People treated with supraphysiological doses of corticosteroid (equivalent to more than 5 mg
prednisolone daily
) for longer than 3 weeks, should be assumed to have adrenal insufficiency. They
should all be given a steroid card.

Studies suggest that even a short course of corticosteroids (5 days of treatment equal to or greater than 25mg daily
of prednisolone) can result in adrenal suppression for up to 2 weeks after cessation10. The clinical significance of
this is uncertain but adrenal insufficiency is something you should consider in people who have taken less than a
3 week course of corticosteroids.
*Equivalent physiological doses of corticosteroids


Prednisolone 5mg is equivalent to:

Hydrocortisone 20mg
Dexamethasone 750 micrograms
Cortisone acetate 25mg

Factors that increase the risk of adrenal suppression include:

The use of long acting corticosteroids (for example dexamethasone) Evening dosing of corticosteroid Recent or repeated use of corticosteroids Co-prescribing with enzyme inhibitors such as HIV protease inhibitors or itraconazole.
It should be noted that high dose inhaled steroids can also cause adrenal suppression.
Further information can be found in Part One (above) of this Tayside Prescriber.


Management of adrenal insufficiency
When to give a Steroid Card
All patients with adrenal insufficiency. o This includes all patients on physiological doses of hydrocortisone for replacement therapy o Patients with irreversible insufficiency should also consider a medic-alert bracelet. o For longer than 3 weeks at a dose equivalent to more than 5mg prednisolone daily o If risk of adrenal suppression is high.
Reducing corticosteroid doses
In patients taking more than 5 mg prednisolone (or equivalent) daily, dose reduction should be determined by the
underlying disease activity for which the steroids are being used. Once a physiological dose is achieved (e.g. 5mg
prednisolone daily), then the dose should be gradually tapered over 2 to 3 months (e.g. reduce by 1mg prednisolone
every 2 weeks), unless the underlying disease dictates otherwise. If symptoms of adrenal insufficiency develop the
steroid dose should be increased again and the dose tapered more slowly. Referral to endocrinology at this point
may be considered.

Management of intercurrent illness or surgery

All patients with known or suspected adrenal insufficiency should increase their corticosteroid dose if they develop
any fever or moderate to severe illness (generally an illness that would stop them going to work or school).
Advice for management of patients taking physiological hydrocortisone replacement for intercurrent illness or surgery
can be found at
As a general rule:
o Corticosteroid doses should be doubled for moderate infection (including a pyrexial illness). o In severe illness a dose of 40mg oral prednisolone should be sufficient. Where the oral route is not suitable then 50mg of intravenous or intramuscular hydrocortisone 6 hourly should be used11. o Doses may be reduced by 50% per day on resolution of the illness until previous dose is reached.
The recommendations in Parts One and Two of this guidance should be used to aid management decisions
but do not replace the need for clinical judgement in the care of individual patients in clinical practice.


References

1. Scottish Executive Health Department. Steroid treatment cards. SEHD/CMO (2006) 10. 26th July 2. British National Formulary No. 57. Chapters 3.1; 3.2 and 6.3.2. London: BMJ Group and RPS 3. BNF for children 2008. Chapters 3.2 BMJ Group, RPS Publishing, RCPH Publications Ltd 2008. 4. Summary of product characteristics for beclometasone dipripionate CFC-free (Qvar). Norton Healthcare Ltd. Trading as IVAX Pharmaceuticals Ltd. Last updated January 2005. 5. Harrison L I et al. Adrenal effects and pharmacokinetics of CFC-free beclometasone dipropionate: a 14 day dose response study. J Pharm Pharmacol 1999, 51:263-269. 6. Thompson P J et al. Safety of hydrofluoroalkane -134a beclometasone dipropionate extra fine aerosol. Respir. Med. 1998; 92, Supplement A, 33-39. 7. Scottish Intercollegiate Guidelines Network (SIGN). British Guideline in the Management of Asthma. A national clinical guideline. May 2008. ssed 29/05/09. 8. Inhaled corticosteroids: children are at risk from high doses. National Prescribing Centre. MeReC 9. CSM/MCA Current problems in pharmacovigilance. 2002; 28: 7. http://www.mhra.gov.uk/Publications/Safetyguidance/CurrentProblemsinPharmacovigilance/CON007451. Accessed 29/05/09. 10. Henzen C, Suter A, Lerch E, Urbinelli R, Schorno XH, Briner VA. Suppression and recovery of adrenal response after short-term, high-dose glucocorticoid treatment. Lancet 2000;355(9203):542-5. 11. Cooper MS, Stewart PM. Corticosteroid insufficiency in acutely ill patients. N Engl J Med
Disclaimer
This bulletin is based on evidence available to the Tayside Medicines Governance Unit at time of publication and is covered by the Disclaimer and Terms & Conditions of use and access to the NHS Tayside Drug and Therapeutics Committee website (

Source: http://www.nhstayside.scot.nhs.uk/RMCN/documents/Guidance%20on%20steroid%20treatment%20cards.pdf

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