community acquired pneumonia (CAP) and steroids (steroid use in CAP)
Last edited 05/2023 and last reviewed 05/2023
There is evidence regarding positive outcomes from using oral steroid treatment in community acquired pneumonia (CAP):
- a systematic review regarding the use of steroids in hospitalized patients
with CAP was undertaken (1)
- this concluded:
- for hospitalized adults with CAP, systemic corticosteroid therapy
may reduce mortality by approximately 3%, need for mechanical ventilation
by approximately 5%, and hospital stay by approximately 1 day
- for hospitalized adults with CAP, systemic corticosteroid therapy
may reduce mortality by approximately 3%, need for mechanical ventilation
by approximately 5%, and hospital stay by approximately 1 day
- this concluded:
- a further systematic review concluded (2):
- corticosteroid therapy reduced mortality and morbidity in adults with severe CAP; the number needed to treat for an additional beneficial outcome was 18 patients (95% CI 12 to 49) to prevent one death
- corticosteroid therapy reduced morbidity, but not mortality, for adults and children with non-severe CAP
- corticosteroid therapy was associated with more adverse events, especially
hyperglycaemia, but the harms did not seem to outweigh the benefits
- considering both adult and paediatric patients (3)
- a systematic review stated that the "take home message" was
that
- "..for adult patients with severe community-acquired pneumonia, corticosteroids reduce morbidity and mortality. For pediatric patients and adults with nonsevere community-acquired pneumonia, corticosteroids appear to reduce morbidity, but not mortality"
- the authors stated that
- current data suggest that corticosteroids reduce morbidity and
mortality in severe community-acquired pneumonia
- corticosteroids were also shown to be beneficial in patients with nonsevere community-acquired pneumonia who were admitted to the hospital
- administration of corticosteroids was associated with an increased rate of hyperglycemia, without a difference in other adverse events
- limitations of the review were highlighted:
- studies included in the meta-analysis varied in the doses, days of total treatment, and type of corticosteroid administered
- review included patients with a variety of medical conditions (eg, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, diabetes), who may respond differently than patients without these comorbidities
- many of the outcomes were limited by small sample sizes, with one study comprising nearly half of all of the included patients
- sample sizes in the pediatric studies were very small
- current data suggest that corticosteroids reduce morbidity and
mortality in severe community-acquired pneumonia
- a systematic review stated that the "take home message" was
that
- a systematic review found (4):
- corticosteroid therapy is associated with a lower incidence of progression to requiring mechanical ventilation among patients hospitalized with CAP
- no association was found between corticosteroid therapy and mortality, treatment failure, or adverse events
- steroid therapy in adults who had been admitted to the intensive care unit (ICU) for severe CAP
- among patients with severe community-acquired pneumonia being treated in the ICU, those who received hydrocortisone had a lower risk of death by day 28 than those who received placebo (5)
- among patients with severe community-acquired pneumonia being treated in the ICU, those who received hydrocortisone had a lower risk of death by day 28 than those who received placebo (5)
- a review (18 RCTs; n=4,661) found corticosteroids probably reduce mortality in more severe community-acquired pneumonia (RR 0.62 [95% CI 0.45 to 0.85]; moderate certainty) and probably reduce risk of requiring invasive mechanical ventilation and ICU admission (6)
Reference:
- (1) Siemieniuk RA et al. Corticosteroid Therapy for Patients Hospitalized With Community-Acquired Pneumonia: A Systematic Review and Meta-analysis.Ann Intern Med. 2015 Oct 6;163(7):519-28
- (2) Stern A, Skalsky K, Avni T, Carrara E, Leibovici L, Paul M. Corticosteroids for pneumonia. Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2017 Dec 13;12:CD007720. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD007720
- (3) Seagraves T, Gottieleb M. Are Corticosteroids Beneficial in the Treatment of Community-Acquired Pneumonia? Ann Emerg Med. 2018 Jun 21. pii: S0196-0644(18)30410-4
- (4) Saleem N, Kulkarni A, Snow TAC, et al. Effect of Corticosteroids on Mortality and Clinical Cure in Community-Acquired Pneumonia: A Systematic Review, Meta-analysis, and Meta-regression of Randomized Control Trials. Chest. 2022 Sep:S0012-3692(22)03705-9.
- (5) Dequin P et al; for the CRICS-TriGGERSep Network. Hydrocortisone in Severe Community-Acquired Pneumonia. NEJM March 21, 2023.
- (6) Pitre, T., Abdali, D., Chaudhuri, D. et al. Corticosteroids in Community-Acquired Bacterial Pneumonia: a Systematic Review, Pairwise and Dose-Response Meta-Analysis. J GEN INTERN MED (2023). https://doi.org/10.1007/s11606-023-08203-6