| 15 Juillet 2014
Inhaled corticosteroids are prescribed as first-line treatments for adults and children with  persistent asthma. They are the most effective drugs for controlling asthma and clearly reduce asthma deaths,  hospital visits and the number and severity of exacerbations, and improve quality of life. Yet, their potential  effect on the growth of children is a source of worry for parents and doctors. Worldwide, seven ICS drugs are  currently available: beclomethasone, budesonide, ciclesonide, flunisolide, fluticasone, mometasone and  triamcinolone. Ciclesonide, fluticasone and mometasone are newer and supposedly safer drugs. The first systematic review focused on 25 trials involving 8,471 children up to 18 years old with  mild to moderate persistent asthma. These trials tested all available inhaled corticosteroids except triamcinolone  and showed that, as a group, they suppressed growth rates when compared to placebos or non-steroidal drugs. 14 of  the trials, involving 5,717 children, reported growth over a year. The average growth rate, which was around 6-9  cm per year in control groups, was reduced by about 0.5 cm in treatment groups. “The evidence we reviewed suggests that children treated daily with inhaled corticosteroids may  grow approximately half a centimetre less during the first year of treatment,” said lead author of the review,  Linjie Zhang, who is based at the Faculty of Medicine at the Federal University of Rio Grande in Rio Grande,  Brazil. “But this effect is less pronounced in subsequent years, is not cumulative, and seems minor compared to  the known benefits of the drugs for controlling asthma and ensuring full lung growth.”  In the second review, the same authors, working with two others, reviewed data from 22 trials in  which children were treated with low or medium doses of inhaled corticosteroids. These trials tested different  doses of all drugs except triamcinolone and flunisolide. Only three trials followed 728 children for a year or  more, with one of these trials testing three different dosing regimens. In the three trials, using lower doses of  the inhaled corticosteroids, by about one puff per day, improved growth by a quarter of a centimetre at one  year. The researchers found that growth suppression varied across studies, and so they looked at the  relationship between a variety of factors and their effects on growth. Some of the variation could be explained by  the drugs used, although since this was an indirect comparison the authors say more evidence is needed.  “Conclusions about the superiority of one drug over another should be confirmed by further trials that directly  compare the drugs,” said Zhang. More long-term trials and trials comparing different doses are also needed, particularly in  children with more severe asthma requiring higher doses of inhaled corticosteroids, the researchers conclude.  “Only 14% of the trials we looked at monitored growth in a systematic way for over a year. This is a matter of  major concern given the importance of this topic,” said Francine Ducharme, one of the authors of both reviews and  senior author of the second review, based at the Department of Paediatrics at the University of Montreal in  Montreal, Canada. “We recommend that the minimal effective dose be used in children with asthma until further data  on doses becomes available. Growth should be carefully documented in all children treated with inhaled  corticosteroids, as well in all future trials testing inhaled corticosteroids in children.” Cochrane is an independent, trusted producer of research into the effects of healthcare treatments  and interventions. Policymakers, health practitioners and patients can make better decisions using high quality,  trusted evidence.
Corticosteroid drugs that are given by inhalers to children with asthma may suppress their growth,  evidence suggests. Two new systematic reviews published in The Cochrane Library focus on the effects of  inhaled corticosteroid drugs (ICS) on growth rates. The authors found children’s growth slowed in the first year  of treatment, although the effects were minimised by using lower doses.









