Asthma Clinical Trial
Official title:
The Effect of Inhaled Corticosteroids on the Risk of Diabetes, Impaired Glucose Tolerance and Characteristics of Glucose Regulation in Adults With Asthma : a Population Based Matched Controlled Study
Inhaled steroid has been the cornerstone in the treatment of asthma, which carries a huge patient population worldwide including Hong Kong. In general, the safety of long-term use of inhaled steroid has been well documented. Yet, long-term users of such treatment carry increased risk of complications like cataract. In particular, the exact association of inhaled steroid use and development of diabetes mellitus is not known, despite a clear causal relationship between oral steroid use and diabetes. Therefore this epidemiology study (based on questionnaire and blood tests) aims to investigate the effect of inhaled corticosteroid on the risk of diabetes, impaired glucose tolerance and insulin resistance in adults with asthma. The impact of this study is expected to affect the current practice of long-term use of inhaled corticosteroid especially among patients with asthma.
Inhaled corticosteroids (ICS) have been shown to have many side effects that are consistent
with systemic corticosteroids, suggesting that its systemic absorption can lead to adverse
effects in the long term users. ICS can pose a major health impact in the community,
especially when its use has become widely accepted as mainstay treatment for asthma and
chronic obstructive airway diseases in recent decades.
In 1997, inhaled corticosteroids were shown to increase the risk of nuclear cataracts by
1.5-fold and posterior subcapsular cataracts by 1.9-fold respectively. Besides, high dose
ICS use for more than 3 months increased risk of open angle glaucoma with OR 1.44. In 1998,
a case control study demonstrated positive association of cataract extraction in elderly ICS
users. ICS use of more than 3 years increased cataract by 3-fold in high dose users (> 1mg
daily budesonide dipropionate). Whereas low dose use (<1mg daily budesonide dipropionate)
for more than 2 years increased cataract by 1.6-fold. Subsequent studies also found
increased risk of osteoporosis in long term ICS users.
It has been well known that systemic corticosteroid causes diabetes by inducing insulin
resistance. Previous study showed a 2-fold increased risk of diabetes in patients using
systemic corticosteroids.
Nevertheless, of the many systemic side effects that are known to inhaled corticosteroids,
its effect on the risk of diabetes has not been established yet.
There have also been 2 small scale studies about the effect of ICS on insulin resistance
profile, however, the study findings were also inconclusive.
In 1987, a study of 9 subjects, given 4 weeks of inhaled budesonide dipropionate 1mg daily,
were shown to have increase in 2-hour peak glucose level in oral glucose tolerance test, and
also increased fasting serum insulin concentration, suggesting that ICS use was associated
with glucose dysregulation and increase insulin resistance. Subsequently, in 1993, another
study of 15 subjects with unstable asthma compared to 15 normal control subjects, a
reduction in insulin resistance in patients with uncontrolled asthma was noted upon 1 month
of ICS treatment; while the insulin resistance profile became static at 5 and 8 months of
therapy. This study suggests that insulin resistance profile is increased in subjects with
unstable asthma in relation to the stress induced during exacerbation. ICS can reduce
insulin resistance profile by stabilizing asthma control.
In terms of researches relating ICS to diabetes, there are limited studies in the elderly.
In 1998, a study showed dose dependent worsening of diabetic control in the diabetic elderly
using high dose ICS. However, 2 subsequent case control studies conducted in 2002 failed to
demonstrate any association of diabetes in elderly with either current use of ICS or 3 years
uses of ICS.
These study results are subjected to confounding by concurrent systemic corticosteroid
usage, lack of long term users of ICS, as well as the effect of other competing causes of
diabetes (ie. aging and obesity) being so strong in the elderly that the impact of ICS on
the risk of diabetes might have been masked in this particular group of patients.
So far, data is lacking in terms of the association between inhaled corticosteroids and
diabetes, as well as impaired glucose tolerance - the pre-diabetic condition. Moreover, the
profile of glucose regulation and potential hyperinsulinemia in ICS users with normal
glucose tolerance is largely unexplored.
As Asians are at increased risk of developing NIDDM, the effect of ICS in inducing diabetes
in the Chinese might be more prominent than that for subjects in the western countries. It
is of more clinical significance and relevance to study this issue in a Chinese dominant
community like Hong Kong.
Therefore, we shall investigate the effect of ICS, trying to understand its impact on the
whole disease spectrum of insulin resistance. We shall begin with study on the risk of
diabetes, then move on to that of impaired glucose tolerance (IGT) and finally to explore
potential hyperinsulinemia in subjects with normal glucose tolerance who have used ICS. We
will also put particular emphasis on the younger Chinese population, where the impact of age
and obesity is less marked, and therefore, the effect of ICS on the risk of DM/IGT/
hyperinsulinemia can be better manifested and delineated.
About 10% of our population has asthma and of these, 50% are on long term inhaled
corticosteroids. While asthma is not known to cause diabetes and hence not a confounder for
the association of ICS and DM, we shall therefore target at the adult Chinese asthma
patients using ICS as our study subjects, and compare the risk of
diabetes/IGT/hyperinsulinemia of this group of patients with that of the general population.
Since diabetes mellitus is a major health problem that is strongly associated with multiple
cardiovascular morbidity and mortality, and inhaled corticosteroid being the most commonly
prescribed drug in treating chronic airway diseases, knowledge regarding the risk of DM in
association with chronic ICS use will be of major impact on public health.
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Observational Model: Case Control, Time Perspective: Cross-Sectional
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