Oral steroids not helpful for acute lower respiratory tract infection in nonasthmatic adults
Clinical Question
Are steroids useful in the treatment of acute lower respiratory tract infection in adults without asthma?
Bottom Line
This study found no clinically significant benefit of steroids for the treatment of acute lower respiratory tract infection (LRTI) in adults without asthma, including those presenting with wheezing or shortness of breath. (LOE = 1b)
Reference
Hay AD, Little P, Harnden A, et al. Effect of oral prednisolone on symptom duration and severity in nonasthmatic adults with acute lower respiratory tract infection. A randomized clinical trial. JAMA 2017;318(8):721-730. [PMID:28829884]
Study Design
Randomized controlled trial (double-blinded)
Funding
Government
Allocation
Concealed
Setting
Outpatient (primary care)
Synopsis
Because symptoms of acute LRTI can mimic those of exacerbated asthma, steroids are commonly prescribed with or without antibiotics. These investigators enrolled adults, 18 years or older, presenting with an acute cough (lasting 28 days or less) as the main symptom and at least 1 other lower respiratory tract symptom (eg, phlegm, chest pain, wheezing, or shortness of breath). Exclusion criteria included evidence of chronic pulmonary disease, having received any asthma medication in the previous 5 years, or requiring same day hospitalization or urgent antibiotic treatment. Patients (N = 401) randomly received (concealed allocation assignment) either 40 mg prednisolone daily for 5 days or matched placebo. Those patients also receiving a nonurgent antibiotic prescription were asked to delay filling the prescription for at least 48 hours. Patients assessed outcomes using symptom diaries and remained masked to their treatment group assignment. Symptoms were measured daily, including twice-daily peak expiratory flow, for 28 days or until symptom resolution. Complete follow-up occurred for 94% of patients at 28 days. Using intention-treat analysis, no clinically significant group differences occurred in the median duration of cough or severity of symptoms, symptom duration, antibiotic use, peak flow, or patient satisfaction. There were also no significant subgroup effect differences (ie, smoking, wheezing, chest pain, or shortness of breath).
Oral steroids not helpful for acute lower respiratory tract infection in nonasthmatic adultsis the Evidence Central Word of the day!
Citation
Barry, Henry, et al., editors. "Oral Steroids Not Helpful for Acute Lower Respiratory Tract Infection in Nonasthmatic Adults." EE+ POEM Archive, John Wiley & Sons, 2025. Evidence Central, evidence.unboundmedicine.com/evidence/view/infoPOEMs/1314374/all/Oral steroids not helpful for acute lower respiratory tract infection in nonasthmatic adults.
Oral steroids not helpful for acute lower respiratory tract infection in nonasthmatic adults. In: Barry HH, Ebell MHM, Shaughnessy AFA, et al, eds. EE+ POEM Archive. John Wiley & Sons; 2025. https://evidence.unboundmedicine.com/evidence/view/infoPOEMs/1314374/all/Oral steroids not helpful for acute lower respiratory tract infection in nonasthmatic adults. Accessed February 6, 2025.
Oral steroids not helpful for acute lower respiratory tract infection in nonasthmatic adults. (2025). In Barry, H., Ebell, M. H., Shaughnessy, A. F., & Slawson, D. C. (Eds.), EE+ POEM Archive. John Wiley & Sons. https://evidence.unboundmedicine.com/evidence/view/infoPOEMs/1314374/all/Oral steroids not helpful for acute lower respiratory tract infection in nonasthmatic adults
Oral Steroids Not Helpful for Acute Lower Respiratory Tract Infection in Nonasthmatic Adults [Internet]. In: Barry HH, Ebell MHM, Shaughnessy AFA, Slawson DCD, editors. EE+ POEM Archive. John Wiley & Sons; 2025. [cited 2025 February 06]. Available from: https://evidence.unboundmedicine.com/evidence/view/infoPOEMs/1314374/all/Oral steroids not helpful for acute lower respiratory tract infection in nonasthmatic adults.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - ELEC
T1 - Oral steroids not helpful for acute lower respiratory tract infection in nonasthmatic adults
ID - 1314374
ED - Barry,Henry,
ED - Ebell,Mark H,
ED - Shaughnessy,Allen F,
ED - Slawson,David C,
BT - EE+ POEM Archive
UR - https://evidence.unboundmedicine.com/evidence/view/infoPOEMs/1314374/all/Oral steroids not helpful for acute lower respiratory tract infection in nonasthmatic adults
PB - John Wiley & Sons
DB - Evidence Central
DP - Unbound Medicine
ER -