Objective: We examined asthma control in children hospitalized for status asthmaticus 7-10 days after discharge with or without an additional prescription for systemic corticosteroids.
Methods: This was a prospective observational study of patients aged 5-17 years with a documented history of asthma or β-agonist responsive wheezing admitted to the hospital for an acute asthma exacerbation. We compared patients who had any systemic corticosteroid prescribed at discharge with those who were not prescribed systemic corticosteroids at discharge. The primary outcomes were asthma control after discharge, as defined by the Asthma Control Test (ACT), and missed school days, which we modeled with multivariable linear and Poisson regression, respectively.
Results: A total of 56 patients were included in the study, 29 (52%) received dexamethasone inpatient and then were discharged without additional prescribed systemic corticosteroids. Those without a corticosteroid prescription at discharge were less likely to have received noninvasive ventilation (p = 0.02), pulmonology consultation (p = 0.02), and continuous albuterol (p = 0.01) during hospitalization. These patients also tended toward shorter length of stay (p = 0.07) compared to those receiving systemic corticosteroid prescription at discharge. In multivariable models, being discharged without systemic corticosteroid prescription was associated with poorer asthma control after discharge [beta (95% CI), -2.21 (-2.65 to -1.77)] and more missed school days [coefficient estimate (95% CI), 0.87 (0.07-1.68)].
Conclusions: After hospitalization for an asthma exacerbation, patients not given systemic corticosteroids at discharge tended to have worse asthma control following discharge despite having less severe disease and requiring less aggressive inpatient management.
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Keywords: Children; acute asthma exacerbation; dexamethasone; inpatient; status asthmaticus.