[Benefits of corticosteroids in the treatment of Horton's disease and rhizomelic pseudopolyarthritis: advantages and inconveniences. A meta-analysis].
الكلمات الدالة
نبذة مختصرة
Although corticosteroid treatment is clearly beneficial to patients with temporal arteritis, its exact risk/benefit ratio in these old and side effects-prone patients is unknown. We have thus surveyed that available French and English literature, in order to pool the published series and to evaluate the iatrogenic potential of corticosteroids in this situation. We selected 11 series, yielding a total of 1008 patients. A treatment failure resulted in the death of the patient in five cases. Twenty-seven patients became blind, but only 2 under treatment. The side-effects involved 29% of the patients and are responsible of 29 deaths (2.9%): osteoporosis was the main problem, followed by femoral head necrosis and muscle wasting. Gastroduodenal ulcers were uncommon and generally benign; sigmoid colon diverticulitis was infrequent but dangerous; some infectious complications were noted (herpes zoster, tuberculosis, etc...); high blood pressure and diabetes were common problems. Psychiatric side-effects were rare. Thus, the unwanted effects of corticosteroids in the treatment of temporal arteritis are relatively infrequent and generally not severe, except osteoporosis. They should be systematically prevented by appropriate diet and treatments (e.g., calcium, potassium, and vitamin D supplements).