The International Journal of Medical Science and Health Research
Vol. 47 No. 2 (2026): The International Journal of Medical Science and Health Research

Association Between Postnatal Steroid Use and Long-term Neurodevelopmental Impairment : A Systematic Review

Deskafiani Putri (Unknown)
Firman Syahbana (Unknown)



Article Info

Publish Date
14 May 2026

Abstract

Introduction: Postnatal systemic corticosteroids are used to prevent or treat bronchopulmonary dysplasia (BPD) in preterm infants, but concerns persist regarding their association with long-term neurodevelopmental impairment (NDI). This systematic review synthesizes evidence on the association between postnatal steroid use (dexamethasone and hydrocortisone) and long-term neurodevelopmental outcomes. Methods: A systematic review was conducted following PRISMA guidelines. We screened studies based on predefined criteria: neonatal exposure to systemic postnatal corticosteroids, comparison groups, neurodevelopmental outcomes assessed at ≥12 months corrected age, and RCT or high-quality observational design. Data extraction covered study design, population, steroid regimen, neurodevelopmental outcomes, follow-up timing, association results, and confounding factors. A total of 80 studies were included. Results: Early dexamethasone (<7-8 days) consistently increased cerebral palsy (CP) risk (RR 1.77, 95% CI 1.21-2.58; Doyle et al., 2021). Late dexamethasone (≥7 days) showed no significant CP increase. Early hydrocortisone did not significantly increase CP (RR 1.06, 95% CI 0.67-1.67; Morris et al., 2019) and improved survival without moderate-severe NDI in some analyses. Late hydrocortisone showed neutral neurodevelopmental effects in large RCTs at 2 years and school age. Dose-response relationships were observed for both agents. Gestational age and baseline BPD risk modified treatment effects. Discussion: Apparent contradictions in the literature are reconciled by considering timing of initiation (early vs late), steroid type (dexamethasone vs hydrocortisone), cumulative dose, historical regimens versus current low-dose protocols, confounding by indication, competing mortality risk, and effect modification by gestational age and BPD risk. Early dexamethasone is consistently harmful, while hydrocortisone appears predominantly neutral but with dose-dependent signals. Conclusion: Early dexamethasone should be avoided. Late dexamethasone and hydrocortisone have more favorable profiles but require careful patient selection. The benefit-risk balance is most favorable for extremely preterm infants at highest BPD risk. Further school-age follow-up studies are needed.

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Journal Info

Abbrev

ijmhsr

Publisher

Subject

Dentistry Health Professions Medicine & Pharmacology Nursing Public Health Veterinary

Description

The International Journal of Medical Science and Health Research, published by International Medical Journal Corp. Ltd. is dedicated to providing physicians with the best research and important information in the world of medical research and science and to present the information in a format that ...