Abstract
Glucocorticoids are highly effective medicines in the treatment of
inflammatory disorders. However they cause severe dose-related adverse
reactions, particularly where taken systemically for prolonged periods.
Systemic glucocorticoids are therefore given at dosage sufficient to
control the disease, then withdrawn as fast as is possible to minimise
dose-related adverse effects without losing disease control. End-of-use
adverse reactions present a major challenge in the withdrawal of long
term (>3 weeks) glucocorticoids. Suppression of the
hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis causes adrenal insufficiency,
which is potentially life threatening and can become symptomatic as
treatment is withdrawn. Adrenal insufficiency can be extremely difficult
to differentiate from ‘glucocorticoid withdrawal syndrome’, where
patients experience symptoms despite adequate adrenal function, and from
psychological dependence. Long term systemic glucocorticoids should
therefore be withdrawn slowly. The rate at which the dose is tapered
should initially be determined by treatment requirements of the
underlying disease. Once physiological doses (prednisolone 7.5mg or
equivalent) are reached, the rate of reduction is determined by rate of
HPA recovery and need for exogenous glucocorticoid cover while
endogenous secretion recovers. If symptoms prevent treatment withdrawal,
HPA testing should be used to look for adrenal insufficiency. Patients
with adrenal insufficiency require physiological doses of
glucocorticoids for adrenal replacement, which may be lifelong if the
HPA axis fails to recover.