Patients should carry 'steroid treatment' or/and 'steroid emergency' cards, depending upon indication and exogenous steroid dose. The steroid cards give clear guidance on the precautions to be taken to minimise risk and provide details of prescriber, drug, dosage, and the duration of treatment.
Adrenal crisis
Where a child is vomiting or acutely unwell parenteral hydrocortisone should be started without delay, carers should be trained in administering this in an emergency.
Sudden discontinuation of therapy with Hydrocortisone Oral Solution risks triggering an adrenal crisis and death. Medicinal product-induced secondary adrenocortical insufficiency may result from too rapid a withdrawal of corticosteroids and may be minimised by gradual reduction of dosage. This type of relative insufficiency may persist for months after discontinuation of therapy; therefore, in any situation of stress occurring during that period, corticosteroid therapy should be reinstated.
Infections and immunisation
Replacement schedules of corticosteroids for people with adrenal insufficiency do not cause immunosuppression and are not, therefore, contraindications for administration of live vaccines.
Infection should not be more likely at a replacement dose of hydrocortisone, but all infections should be treated seriously and stress dosing of steroid initiated early (see section 4.2). Patients with adrenal insufficiency are at risk of life-threatening adrenal crisis during infection so clinical suspicion of infection should be high and specialist advice should be sought early.
Undesirable effects of corticosteroid replacement therapy
Most undesirable effects of corticosteroids are dose and duration of exposure related. Undesirable effects are therefore less likely when using corticosteroids as replacement therapy.
Corticosteroids may cause growth retardation in infancy, childhood and adolescence; this may be irreversible. Treatment should be limited to the minimum dosage required to achieve desired clinical response and when reduction in dosage is possible, the reduction should be gradual. Excessive weight gain with decreased height velocity or other symptoms or signs of Cushing syndrome indicate excessive glucocorticoid replacement. Infants require frequent assessment and should be evaluated at a minimum every 3 to 4 months to assess growth, blood pressure, and general well-being.
Bone mineral density may be impacted in children when higher doses of replacement steroids are used. The lowest appropriate dose of steroid according to the response of the individual patient should be used.
Patients/and or carers should be warned that potentially severe psychiatric adverse reactions; euphoria, mania, psychosis with hallucinations and delirium have been seen in adult patients at replacement doses of hydrocortisone (see section 4.8). Symptoms typically emerge within a few days or weeks of starting the treatment. Risks may be higher with high doses/systemic exposure (see also section 4.5), although dose levels do not allow prediction of the onset, type, severity or duration of reactions. Most reactions recover after either dose reduction or withdrawal, although specific treatment may be necessary. Patients/carers should be encouraged to seek medical advice if worrying psychological symptoms develop, especially if depressed mood or suicidal ideation is suspected. Patients/carers should also be alert to possible psychiatric disturbances that may occur either during or immediately after dose tapering/withdrawal of systemic steroids, although such reactions have been reported infrequently.
Rare instances of anaphylactoid reactions have occurred in patients receiving corticosteroids, especially when a patient has a history of allergies to medicinal products.
Visual disturbance
Visual disturbance may be reported with systemic and topical corticosteroid use. If a patient presents with symptoms such as blurred vision or other visual disturbances, the patient should be considered for referral to an ophthalmologist for evaluation of possible causes which may include cataract, glaucoma or rare diseases such as central serous chorioretinopathy which have been reported after use of systemic and topical corticosteroids.
Thyrotoxic Periodic Paralysis (TPP)
Thyrotoxic Periodic Paralysis (TPP) can occur in patients with hyperthyroidism and with hydrocortisone-induced hypokalaemia. TPP must be suspected in patients treated with hydrocortisone presenting signs or symptoms of muscle weakness, especially in patients with hyperthyroidism.
If TPP is suspected, levels of blood potassium must be immediately monitored and adequately managed to ensure the restoration of normal levels of blood potassium.
Hydrocortisone 10 mg/5 ml Oral Solution contains sodium methyl parahydroxybenzoate, sodium propyl parahydroxybenzoate and propylene glycol
This medicinal product contains sodium methyl parahydroxybenzoate and sodium propyl parahydroxybenzoate. May cause allergic reactions (possibly delayed).
This medicinal product contains 1.34 mg sodium per ml, equivalent to 0.07 % of the WHO recommended maximum daily intake of 2 g sodium for an adult.
This medicinal product contains 0.80 mg propylene glycol in each ml.