Clinical and treatment characteristics were examined for indications of treatment, usage patterns, and complications following administration of oral corticosteroid therapy in athletes. We chose to survey orthopaedic physicians exclusively about OCS prescribing patterns in competitive high school and college athletes and only for the two years prior to completing the survey. Believing that our data would rely upon limited medical documentation and recall of past OCS use, we tried to reduce these limitations by restricting data collection to the 24 months prior to completing the survey. Thirty-four percent of orthopaedic sports medicine physicians we surveyed reported prescribing a short-term course of oral corticosteroids for the treatment of an athletic-related musculoskeletal injury within the previous 24 months. The types and ages of athletes surveyed by Langer et al., 2006 and Harmon and Hawley, 2003 were not specified, implying that recreational and older athletes were likely included in their data. We chose to survey OCS prescribing practices in the competitive high school and college athlete because less is known about use and the associated health risks in these groups. Our results showed that oral corticosteroids were often prescribed by orthopaedists who received fellowship training in sports medicine. We found 60% of reporting physicians prescribed short-term OCS therapy as treatment for acute injury and chronic inflammation (Table 3). Harmon and Hawley, 2003 reported approximately one third of primary care physicians’ surveyed prescribed oral corticosteroids for acute injury conditions, one third prescribed OCS for chronic conditions, and one third used OCS for both acute and chronic conditions. Whereas, Langer et al., 2006 found that post-injury pain, swelling, and stiffness were the most common indications reported for use of a Medrol Dosepak. Oral corticosteroids administered as a steroid burst, in which an initial dose is tapered over 5 to 14 days, is a common treatment prescribed for various acute non- athletic conditions (Hougardy et al., 2000; van Staa et al., 2000a). In our survey, approximately 90% of the respondents said they used a tapered dose. Eighty-nine percent reported prescribing oral corticosteroid therapy for an average of 4 to 7 days with 41% indicating 10 mg as the most common starting dose. Despite these findings, it is difficult to understand why almost 90% of the respondents reported they used a tapered dosing and why 41% of the same respondents also reported prescribing an initial 10 mg dose. This seems like a very low dose to start a taper and we felt it important to identify this apparent inconsistency in our findings. Data regarding low-dose OCS therapy are scarce, especially in children and young adults. Da Silva et al., 2006 analyzed the safety of low dose (≤ 10 mg prednisolone equivalent per day) glucocorticoid treatment in rheumatoid arthritis and reported that adverse effects associated were modest, and often not statistically different from those of placebo. In their review, no cases of avascular necrosis were observed in any of the four reviewed trials of low-dose glucocorticoids used in treating rheumatoid arthritis. Similarly, we found no incidence of avascular necrosis when the physician reported prescribing an initial starting OCS dose of ≤ 10 mg over a four to seven day period. There is limited information about the relationship of the risk of fracture with oral corticosteroid use in nonathletes. In one population-based study of adults, OCS use was shown to be more strongly related to daily dose than to cumulative dose on the risk of fracture (van Staa et al., 2000b). Several randomized, double-blind, placebo controlled studies of patients with carpal tunnel syndrome reported one and two-week treatment periods with prednisone, 20 mg daily followed by a one or two-weeks of 10 mg daily (Chang et al., 1998; Herskovitz et al., 1995; Hui et al., 2001). These studies generally reported a low risk and incidence of health complications with short-term oral corticosteroid use of less than two weeks. Adverse effects were generally considered small and included nausea/abdominal discomfort, constipation, and dysgeusia; one, a diabetic, developed mild hyperglycemia. Although oral corticosteroids have been used for many years in the non- athletic population, there are few published reports on the magnitude of risk of health-related complications and the determinants of this risk in the athletic population. Nichols, 2005 searched the medical literature for all years between 1966 and 2003 and identified no studies that discussed the usage or complications of oral corticosteroids in the treatment of athletic injuries. Respondents in this study recalled a very-low incidence of health-complications related to short- term oral corticosteroid treatment. Only 4% of the physicians we surveyed reported the occurrence of medical complications, with only one case of elevated blood glucose reported. Of the orthopaedists’ surveyed by Langer et al., 2006 the most frequent complication reported from prescribing a Medrol Dosepak was glucose intolerance (37%; 222/603). In their study, 171 of the 672 (25%) non-prescribing physicians reported that they had seen a combined total of 500 cases of osteonecrosis as a complication of MDP use. It was also reported that 9% of the physicians (51 of 603) who prescribed a MDP had seen 101 cases of osteonecrosis, mostly in the hip. What is not clear from their findings is whether the osteonecrotic cases reported included only athletes or if the respondent answered by including all patients treated with OCS over their entire clinical practice. In addition, no indication was made of total dosage or whether multiple courses of OCS were used in treatment that may have had an effect on the large number of cases reported. Whether risk of osteonecrosis and bone fracture relate directly to OCS use or the underlying disease itself is not clear from their results. Our finding (6%) of a lower reported incidence of medical complications from short-term corticosteroid use appears to be similar to reports in the literature for non-athletic conditions. The complications attributed to OCS use in our study refer only to complications that were reported to and recalled by the prescribing physician for the two year recall period. Despite the reported low incidence of health complications, we found that 66% of the physicians did not prescribe a short-term OCS to athletes following musculoskeletal injury due to fear of medical complications and lack of clinical data supporting their use. Langer et al., 2006 reported fear of osteonecrosis, risk of medical complications in general, lack of proven efficacy, and fear of malpractice as the frequent reasons why 52% of the sports medicine physicians they surveyed did not prescribe OCS. Future studies should examine the post-treatment follow-up period to discover if any long term complications occur following systemic corticosteroid therapy in the high school and college athlete. We found a statistically significant relationship between physicians who prescribed OCS in the skeletally immature athlete and a greater incidence of complications. Currently it is unknown what effects short-term OCS use has on bone growth and fracture risk in the young athlete (de Vries et al., 2007). Since complications of treatment with OCS appear to be dependent on the type of treatment regimen, size of dose, and duration of treatment, a risk-benefit decision must be made for any young athlete prescribed oral corticosteroids. |