This long-term follow-up study evaluated the effects of
corticosteroid prophylaxis on
graft-versus-host disease (GVHD)-free, relapse-free survival (GRFS) based on a controlled open-label randomized trial in which 228 allotransplant recipients were categorized as low risk (n = 83, group A) or high risk; patients at high risk were randomly assigned to receive (n = 72, group B) or not receive (n = 73, group C) low-dose
methylprednisolone prophylaxis. The cumulative incidences of chronic GVHD, relapse, nonrelapse mortality,
leukemia-free survival, overall survival, and GRFS were 60%, 19%, 16%, 68%, 73%, and 46%, respectively, in all cases. Compared with the patients in group C, the cases in group B experienced a lower cumulative incidence of moderate to severe chronic GVHD (42% versus 20%; P = .010),
herpes zoster infection (28% versus 12%; P = .010), pulmonary
infections (42% versus 21%; P = .040), and
osteonecrosis of the femoral head (ONFH; 16% versus 6%; P = .045) as well as better GRFS (59% versus 33%; P = .017). Factors associated with GRFS included total dose of
corticosteroid used in the first 100days after
transplantation (hazard ratio, 1.547; P = .015) and platelet recovery (hazard ratio, 1.456; P = .037). Our results suggest that low-dose
glucocorticoid prophylaxis reduces GVHD and thus reduces the total dose of
steroids, which might contribute to lower incidence of
infections and ONFH and a superior GRFS, indicating that higher
steroid doses are harmful. Reducing the total dose is of course beneficial. (ClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT01607580.).