Asthma attacks which are moderate-to-severe are typically treated with corticosteroids, but the optimal treatment duration is unknown and treatment responses can be variable. Inadequate treatment may compromise recovery, but increased exposure to corticosteroids is, in turn, associated with drug-related adverse effects. There is a need for a biomarker to guide duration of corticosteroid treatment in asthma attacks. One such candidate biomarker is the blood eosinophil count, which may predict steroid-responsiveness. We hypothesize that the blood eosinophil count can potentially be used as a biomarker to guide the duration of corticosteroids in moderate-to-severe asthma attacks. This study will recruit individuals hospitalized for asthma attack. Participants will be randomized to standard care or blood-eosinophil guided systemic corticosteroid therapy. Subjects in the standard arm will receive oral corticosteroids for a total of 5 days. Subjects in the blood-eosinophil guided arm will receive oral corticosteroids for a total of 5 days if admission eosinophil count is ≥ 0.300 x 10\^3/µL, and receive 3 days of oral corticosteroids if the admission blood eosinophil is \< 0.300 x 10\^3/µL. The rate of treatment failure will be compared between these two groups.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
110
Oral prednisolone for 5 days
Oral prednisolone for 5 days if eosinophil count is ≥ 0.300 x 10\^3/µL, or 3 days if eosinophil is \< 0.300 x 10\^3/µL
Singapore General Hospital
Singapore, Singapore
Changi General Hospital
Singapore, Singapore
Proportion of participants experiencing treatment failure
Defined as death from any cause, or need for invasive/noninvasive mechanical ventilation, or need to restart/extend systemic steroid treatment
Time frame: Through the duration of the index admission for asthma attack, typically 3-5 days
Length of hospital stay (number of days)
Time frame: Through the duration of the index admission for asthma attack, typically 3-5 days
Cumulative steroid dose at index admission (mg prednisolone-equivalent)
Time frame: Through the duration of the index admission for asthma attack, typically 3-5 days
Proportion of participants receiving additional systemic steroid course within 14 days
Time frame: 14 days
Asthma Control Questionnaire-5
Time frame: At baseline, 7, 14, 30 and 90 days
Proportion of participants experiencing all-cause death
Time frame: 30 and 90 days
Proportion of participants who develop pneumonia
Time frame: 30 and 90 days
Proportion of participants who develop venous thromboembolism
Time frame: 30 and 90 days
Proportion of participants who develop sepsis
Time frame: 30 and 90 days
Proportion of participants who develop fractures
Time frame: 30 and 90 days
Proportion of participants who develop upper gastrointestinal bleeds/peptic or gastric ulcers
Time frame: 30 and 90 days
Time to next emergency department visit or admission for asthma
Time frame: 1 year
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