Steroid therapy in the treatment of intractable hyperemesis gravidarum

Date First Published:
October 24, 2010
Last Updated:
October 22, 2011
Report by:
Dr Siu Ling POON, ACCS CT 2 (Emergency Medicine) (Southern General Hospital, Glasgow)
Search checked by:
Dr David Donnelly , Southern General Hospital, Glasgow
Three-Part Question:
In [patients with intractable hyperemesis gravidarum] does [a trial of steroid therapy] lead to [symptomatic relief]?
Clinical Scenario:
A 22-year-old woman, who is currently 12 weeks pregnant, presents to the emergency department complaining of a four week history of severe nausea and vomiting. She appears to be clinically dehydrated and urinalysis confirms she is ketotic. Immediate management includes intravenous fluids and standard anti-emetics. Unfortunately she gets minimal relief and continues to vomit. You recall from your recent oncology placement, the beneficial effect of steroid therapy on chemotherapy induced vomiting, and wonder if a trial of steroids might be useful to control the symptoms of severe hyperemesis gravidarum (HG)
Search Strategy:
EMBASE 1980 to 2011 week 23 and Medline 1948 to June week 2 2011 via the OVID interface using the following search strategy: {(exp hyperemesis gravidarum/ OR hyperemesis gravidarum.mp) AND (exp steroids/ OR steroids.mp OR exp prednisolone/ OR prednisolone.mp OR exp hydrocortisone/ OR hydrocortisone.mp OR exp methylprednisolone/ OR methylprednisolone.mp)}. LIMIT to humans and English.
Outcome:
A total of 197 papers were found, of which 9 were considered relevant to the three-part question and of sufficient quality.
Relevant Paper(s):
Study Title Patient Group Study type (level of evidence) Outcomes Key results Study Weaknesses
Corticosteroids for the treatment of hyperemesis gravidarum Nelson-Piercy C, de Swiet M 1994 UK 4 patients with intractable HG, treated with high dose steroids Case series Symptomatic relief from vomiting All 4 patients were asymptomatic within 24 hours Small number of patients.
Level 4 evidence
Successful management of hyperemesis gravidarum using steroid therapy Taylor R 1996 UK 7 patients with severe HG were treated with high dose steroid therapy Case series Symptomatic relief from vomiting Vomiting ceased in all within 3 hours Small number of patients.
Level 4 evidence
Experience with oral methylprednisolone in the treatment of refractory hyperemesis gravidarum. Safari H, Alsulyman O, Gherman R, et al 1998 USA 18 patients with intractable HG were given 3 days of 48mg / day i.m. methylprednisolone (then tapered dose) Case series Symptomatic relief from vomiting 94% patients were free of vomiting within 3 days of treatment. Recurrence in 53% during or after tapering. Small number of patients.
Level 4 evidence
The efficacy of methylprednisolone in the treatment of hyperemesis gravidarum: A randomized, double-blind, controlled study. Safari H, Fassett M, Souter I, et al. 1998 USA 40 patients with intractable HG

Randomised to 16mg oral methylprednisolone tds (then tapered dose) or 25mg oral promethazine tds for 2 weeks
Prospective randomised double-blind controlled trial Symptomatic relief from vomiting or ability to tolerate oral fluids within 2 days. Readmission to hospital within 2 weeks. No significant difference – 17/20 in steroid group and 18/20 in promethazine group improved within 2 days. Significantly lower readmission in steroid group: 0/17 in steroid group and 5/17 in promethazine group readmitted (p<0.0001). Pilot study - no formal power calculation.

No placebo group.

Groups non-comparable at baseline - duration of HG longer in promethazine group (P=0.03).
Randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial of corticosteroids for the treatment of hyperemesis gravidarum. Nelson-Piercy C, Fayers P, de Swiet M 2001 UK 25 patients with intractable HG

Randomised to 7 days of 20mg bd oral prednisolone (or iv equivalent, followed by oral tapered dose) or placebo
Prospective multi-centre randomised double-blind placebo-controlled trial Vomiting scores at 1 week (0-4). Dependence on iv fluids at 1 week . No significant difference: median reduction of 1.5 in placebo and 2.0 in steroid group (p=0.26). No significant difference: 3/12 patients in each arm still dependant on iv fluids at 1week. Underpowered study – 45 subjects required by power calculation, only 25 recruited (none after publication of interim analysis).

Groups non-comparable at baseline – higher number previously admitted patients and higher gestational age in steroid treated.
Management of hyperemesis gravidarum: the importance of weight loss as a criterion for steroid therapy. Moran P, Taylor R. 2002 UK 25 patients (30 pregnancies) of ≥8 weeks gestation with intractable HG

Subjects given flexible dose and route of steroid and response compared to 25 cases HG not requiring steroids
Retrospective observational study Requirement for iv fluids 73% and 90% patients in steroid group no longer required iv fluids at 24 and 48 hours respectively. (No data for controls) Small sample size.

Non-comparable at baseline.

End points poorly defined.

Variable dosage of steroids given to the patients in study group
A randomized, placebo-controlled trial of corticosteroids for hyperemesis due to pregnancy Yost N, McIntire D, Wians F, et al. 2003 USA 110 inpatients of ≤20 weeks gestation with intractable HG

Randomised to single bolus of 125mg iv methyl-prednisolone (followed by oral tapered prednisolone) or placebo
Prospective randomised double-blind placebo-controlled trial Number requiring subsequent readmission for HG within 2 weeks. No significant difference in readmission rates: 34% steroid treated readmitted v 35% in placebo group (p=0.89). 16/126 patients lost to follow-up.

All study patients also given regular conventional anti-emetics.
The efficacy low dose of prednisolone in the treatment of hyperemesis gravidarum. Ziaei S, Hosseiney F, Faghihzadeh S 2004 Iran 80 patients of gestational age 6-12 weeks with HG treated on out-patient basis

Randomised to 10 days oral prednisolone 5mg od or promethazine 25mg tds

Prospective randomised controlled trial Response in first 48 hours, days 3 – 10 and day 17, of : Severity of nausea (VAS 0-100mm). Median number of vomits per day. Subjective response to treatment. Nausea scores in first 48 hours were lower in promethazine group (p<0.02). No other significant differences. Number of vomits lower in promethazine group in first 48 hours: median 1 (95% CI 0-4) in promethazine group v 3 (95% CI 1-7) in steroid group (p<0.04). No other significant differences. Higher in promethazine group: 75% v 50% reported improvement in first 48 hours (p<0.04). No other significant differences. Pilot study. No formal power calculation.

Patients not blind to treatment.

Low dose of steroid used.

Out-patient setting – patients excluded if dehydrated or had abnormal electrolytes
Pulsed steroid therapy is an effective treatment for intractable hyperemesis gravidarum. Bondok R, El Sharnouby N, Eid H, et al. 2006 Egypt 40 patients with intrauterine pregnancy of ≤16 weeks gestation with intractable HG requiring ITU admission

Randomised to 7 day tapering course of iv hydrocortisone or 10mg tds iv metoclopramide
Prospective randomised double-blind controlled trial Mean number of vomiting episodes per day. Readmission to ITU within 2 weeks. Significantly reduced in hydrocortisone group at days 2, 3 and 7 (p<0.0001). Significantly lower in hydrocortisone group: 0/20 readmitted in hydrocortisone group v 6/20 in metoclopramide group (p<0.0001). Small sample size.

Patients only recruited from ITU setting, although reason for ITU admission not stated.
Author Commentary:
Despite several case series and an observational study advocating the use of steroids in intractable HG, the evidence from randomised controlled trials appears less convincing. Ethical considerations were cited by several authors as the reason preventing comparison of steroids with placebo in this patient group, and neither of the two placebo-controlled RCTs (Nelson-Piercy et al and Yost et al) provided any statistically significant primary results in favour of steroid use over placebo. Nelson-Piercy et al did note a significant improvement in favour of steroids with regards to secondary end-points (such as well-being rating and food intake scores) whilst a non-significant trend towards lower vomiting scores was observed. Of note the study was terminated prematurely and under-powered due to lack of patient recruitment.
Three RCTs compared steroids with established anti-emetics (Safari et al, Ziaei et al and Bondok et al). The latter ITU-based study showed a significant benefit in symptom relief and subsequent ITU readmission in those treated with iv hydrocortisone over iv metoclopramide. Safari et al showed oral methylprednisolone to be as efficacious as oral promethazine in symptom relief within 48 hours, as well as significantly reducing the need for subsequent hospital readmission. Ziaei et al found promethazine to significantly reduce severity of nausea and number of vomits within 48 hours compared to low dose oral prednisolone on an out-patient cohort of patients.
No study reported any serious side-effects of steroid treatment.
Bottom Line:
There appears to be weak evidence to support the use of steroids in intractable HG, however further high quality research is required.
References:
  1. Nelson-Piercy C, de Swiet M. Corticosteroids for the treatment of hyperemesis gravidarum
  2. Taylor R. Successful management of hyperemesis gravidarum using steroid therapy
  3. Safari H, Alsulyman O, Gherman R, et al. Experience with oral methylprednisolone in the treatment of refractory hyperemesis gravidarum.
  4. Safari H, Fassett M, Souter I, et al. . The efficacy of methylprednisolone in the treatment of hyperemesis gravidarum: A randomized, double-blind, controlled study.
  5. Nelson-Piercy C, Fayers P, de Swiet M. Randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial of corticosteroids for the treatment of hyperemesis gravidarum.
  6. Moran P, Taylor R. . Management of hyperemesis gravidarum: the importance of weight loss as a criterion for steroid therapy.
  7. Yost N, McIntire D, Wians F, et al. . A randomized, placebo-controlled trial of corticosteroids for hyperemesis due to pregnancy
  8. Ziaei S, Hosseiney F, Faghihzadeh S. The efficacy low dose of prednisolone in the treatment of hyperemesis gravidarum.
  9. Bondok R, El Sharnouby N, Eid H, et al. . Pulsed steroid therapy is an effective treatment for intractable hyperemesis gravidarum.