J. Vanschoor et al., SHORT COURSES OF HIGH-DOSE INHALED BUDESONIDE AND SERUM IGG SUBCLASS LEVELS IN HEALTHY-VOLUNTEERS, Journal of allergy and clinical immunology, 97(1), 1996, pp. 113-118
Background: The incidence of systemic side effects of inhaled budesoni
de increases at doses exceeding 2000 mu g/day. Objective: This study w
as carried out to investigate whether high-dose inhaled budesonide aff
ects serum IgG subclass concentrations in healthy adult volunteers. Me
thods: Two groups of 10 subjects each inhaled 2.4 mg of budesonide per
day in a double-blind crossover study of morning (8:00 AM and noon, g
roup A) and diurnal (8:00 AM and 8:00 PM, group B) dosing schedules fo
r 4 weeks each, separated by a 2-week washout period. The budesonide w
as inhaled through a pressurized metered-dose inhaler, mounted on a 75
0 ml Nebuhaler (ASTRA Pharmaceuticals, Lund Sweden). The IgG subclass
levels were determined at baseline and every 2 weeks until the end of
the study period (10 weeks). Results: There were no statistically sign
ificant changes in the serum IgG subclass concentrations over the 10-w
eek study period in group A, group B, or groups A and B combined. Conc
lusion: Inhalation of budesonide, 2.4 mg/day, through a large-volume s
pacer for repented 1-month periods does not influence serum IgG subcla
ss concentrations in healthy adults, suggesting that budesonide does n
or cause systemic humoral immunosuppression when given at therapeutic
doses.