Long‐term Corticosteroid Treatment in Giant Cell Arteritis
- 12 January 1986
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Acta Medica Scandinavica
- Vol. 220 (5), 465-469
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.0954-6820.1986.tb02796.x
Abstract
Ninety patients with giant cell arteritis were followed up 9-16 years (median 11.3 years) after diagnosis. The mean duration of corticosteroid therapy was 5.8 years (range 0-12.8 years). Together, the patients had received corticosteroids for 492 patient-years. Five years after diagnosis, 43% of the patients were on corticosteroid therapy. After 9 years, 15 of 60 surviving patients (25%) were still being treated with 1.25-10 mg of prednisolone daily (median dose 5 mg). The relapse rate was about 50%, regardless of the time after diagnosis, when an attempt to withdraw the treatment was made. Forty-six percent of the relapses occurred within one month and 96% within one year of the end of treatment. Most of the flare-ups occurred during the first year of therapy and in 55% of the patients on a prednisolone dosage of 5 mg or less. We did not find any increase in morbidity in our patients compared to the general population. Nor did we see any significant complications which we could attribute to the steroid treatment.Keywords
This publication has 7 references indexed in Scilit:
- Long-term Survival in Giant Cell Arteritis Including Temporal Arteritis and Polymyalgia RheumaticaActa Medica Scandinavica, 2009
- Prognosis of Giant Cell Arteritis Including Temporal Arteritis and Polymyalgia RheumaticaActa Medica Scandinavica, 1981
- Treatment and Prognosis in Polymyalgia Rheumatica and Temporal ArteritisActa Medica Scandinavica, 1979
- Giant‐cell Arteritis, Temporal Arteritis and Polymyalgia RheumaticaActa Medica Scandinavica, 1977
- A PROSPECTIVE STUDY OF 102 PATIENTS WITH THE POLYMYALGIA RHEUMATICA SYNDROMERheumatology, 1976
- Giant cell arteritis — the need for prolonged treatmentJournal of Chronic Diseases, 1973
- Temporal Arteritis and Polymyalgia RheumaticaAnnals of Internal Medicine, 1972