Randomized Trial of Adjunctive Prednisolone for Kawasaki Disease.
Summary
Randomized Trial of Adjunctive Prednisolone for Kawasaki Disease. Original Article Abstract Background The effect of adjunctive glucocorticoids in the primary treatment of Kawasaki disease in unselected patients remains unknown. Methods In this multicenter, open-label, randomized, controlled trial in China, we assigned participants with newly diagnosed Kawasaki disease in a 1:1 ratio to receive prednisolone plus standard treatment or standard treatment alone. The primary outcome was the
Content
# Randomized Trial of Adjunctive Prednisolone for Kawasaki Disease.
*Original Article*
# Abstract
## Background
The effect of adjunctive glucocorticoids in the primary treatment of
Kawasaki disease in unselected patients remains unknown.
## Methods
In this multicenter, open-label, randomized, controlled trial in China,
we assigned participants with newly diagnosed Kawasaki disease in a 1:1 ratio to
receive prednisolone plus standard treatment or standard treatment alone. The
primary outcome was the occurrence of coronary-artery lesions at 1 month after
illness onset. Prespecified key secondary outcomes, for which analyses were not
controlled for multiplicity, included receipt of rescue therapy, duration of
fever, change in the C-reactive protein (CRP) level, and changes in
coronary-artery z scores.
## Results
A total of 3208 participants underwent randomization, with
coronary-artery lesions detected at baseline in 870 of 3184 participants
(27.3%). At 1 month, coronary-artery lesions were detected in 16.0% of the
participants receiving prednisolone plus standard treatment and in 13.8% of
those receiving standard treatment alone (adjusted risk difference, 1.1
percentage points; 95% confidence interval, -1.0 to 3.4; Pā=ā0.31). Rescue
therapy was used in 4.6% of the participants receiving prednisolone plus
standard therapy and in 10.1% of those receiving standard treatment alone; the
median duration of fever was 8.4 hours and 13.2 hours, respectively, and the
reductions in the C-reactive protein level at 72 hours were 67.5 mg per liter
and 59.8 mg per liter. Decreases in coronary-artery z scores were similar in the
two groups. At 3 months, the incidence of coronary-artery lesions was 12.6% with
prednisolone plus standard therapy and 10.5% with standard treatment alone; the
percentage of participants with progression of coronary-artery lesions was 28.6%
and 28.9%, respectively, and the incidence of medium-to-giant coronary-artery
aneurysms was 1.9% and 1.1%. The overall incidence of adverse events did not
differ significantly between the two groups.
## Conclusions
The addition of prednisolone to standard primary treatment for
Kawasaki disease did not reduce the incidence of coronary-artery lesions at 1
month after illness onset. (Funded by the Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences
Innovation Fund for Medical Sciences and the National Natural Science Foundation
of China; ClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT04078568.).
---
DOI: 10.1056/NEJMoa2511478