COPD
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Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study
Comparison of oral and depot intra-muscular steroids in assessing steroid-responsiveness in COPD.
Non-compliance or euphoria may limit the usefulness of prednisolone tablets in assessing steroid-responsiveness in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). Depot intra-muscular methyl-prednisolone (imMP), producing a plateau steroid effect over two weeks, may be more reliable. Following two weeks of placebo, twenty-seven COPD patients (mean FEV 1 43% predicted) participated in a two-week randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled, parallel-design trial taking either 120 mg imMP with placebo tablets or placebo injection with prednisolone 30 mg daily. ⋯ By contrast, there were small mean improvements in lung function on oral prednisolone (mean FEV 1, FVC and IC increased by 100, 320 and 150 ml, respectively). Only the improvement in FVC was significantly greater after prednisolone compared with imMP. Single depot intra-muscular injections of steroids have no advantage over oral daily prednisolone in testing steroid-responsiveness in COPD patients.