Corticosteroid / GlucocorticoidNot Controlled

Deltasone® / Rayos®

Prednisone

Various Generic / Horizon Therapeutics (Rayos)·FDA 1955·
1 mg2.5 mg5 mg10 mg20 mg50 mg

Version 2025-04 · Last reviewed April 1, 2025 · Methodology

List Price

$30

With Insurance

$4-15

The Short Version

Plain-language summary

Deltasone (Prednisone) is a powerful anti-inflammatory steroid that suppresses your immune system. It works fast for severe inflammation, allergic reactions, and autoimmune flare-ups, but long-term use causes significant side effects because it affects nearly every system in the body.

How it works: Prednisone is a prodrug, the liver converts it to prednisolone, the active form. Prednisolone (and all glucocorticoids) works by entering cells and binding to the glucocorticoid receptor (GR). The glucocorticoid-receptor complex then moves to the cell nucleus and powerfully suppresses the genes that produce inflammatory mediators: cytokines, prostaglandins, and leukotrienes. This is why it works so rapidly and broadly across virtually every inflammatory condition, but also why it has widespread metabolic and systemic effects.

What people most commonly report

Increased appetite / weight gain
30-50%
Insomnia / sleep disruption
30%
Elevated blood glucose
20-50%
Mood changes / irritability / euphoria
20-30%
Fluid retention / swelling
20%

Prednisone stimulates appetite through direct CNS effects and shifts fat storage toward the abdomen and face (cushingoid distribution). This is a pharmacological effect, not a behavioral one.

Some studies were independent, others were paid for by the company that makes it.

What Else the Evidence Supports

Non-drug options with clinical backing

Prednisone is often necessary and there is no direct substitute for its anti-inflammatory effect. However, specific nutritional and lifestyle strategies may help mitigate its metabolic consequences during a course, and are important to discuss with your provider.

Low-glycemic / low-carbohydrate diet during courseEmerging

No large RCTs specific to steroid-induced hyperglycemia and diet, but the mechanism is well-understood and low-carb approaches are commonly recommended by endocrinologists during steroid courses.

Calcium (1000-1200mg/day) + Vitamin D3 (1500-2000 IU/day)Emerging

ACR guidelines recommend calcium and vitamin D for any patient on ≥5mg prednisone/day for ≥3 months.

Resistance trainingEmerging

Exercise is protective against glucocorticoid-induced osteoporosis and myopathy; study data generally come from long-term steroid users in RA and transplant populations.

Blood glucose monitoringStrong

Steroid-induced hyperglycemia is underdiagnosed and undertreated in hospital and outpatient settings; monitoring allows appropriate intervention.

What This Really Costs

Long-term cost projection based on current pricing

Monthly

$18

$10 w/ insurance

without insurance

Annual

$216

$120 w/ insurance

without insurance

10 Years

$2.2K

$1.2K w/ insurance

without insurance

30 Years

$6.5K

$3.6K w/ insurance

without insurance

Lifestyle alternative: $0/month in prescriptions. Low-glycemic / low-carbohydrate diet during course - No large RCTs specific to steroid-induced hyperglycemia and diet, but the mechanism is well-understood and low-carb approaches are commonly recommended by endocrinologists during steroid courses.

The average American retiree spends $165,000 on healthcare after retirement (Fidelity, 2024). Informed choices today compound over decades.

Metabolic & Lifestyle Alternatives

Supporting Metabolic Health During and After Prednisone Use

Prednisone is often necessary and there is no direct substitute for its anti-inflammatory effect. However, specific nutritional and lifestyle strategies may help mitigate its metabolic consequences during a course, and are important to discuss with your provider.

Important context: Evidence quality varies across these approaches. Some are well-studied with randomized controlled trial data; others are based on observational or smaller studies. These interventions are not guaranteed to replace medication for all patients. Discuss with your doctor whether any of these are appropriate for your clinical situation.

Low-glycemic / low-carbohydrate diet during course

Prednisone raises blood glucose by stimulating hepatic gluconeogenesis and reducing insulin sensitivity. Limiting refined carbohydrate and sugar intake during a steroid course may reduce the degree of blood glucose elevation.

No large RCTs specific to steroid-induced hyperglycemia and diet, but the mechanism is well-understood and low-carb approaches are commonly recommended by endocrinologists during steroid courses

Calcium (1000-1200mg/day) + Vitamin D3 (1500-2000 IU/day)

Prednisone reduces calcium absorption and increases bone resorption. Calcium and D3 supplementation is a standard recommendation during any steroid course to partially mitigate bone loss.

ACR guidelines recommend calcium and vitamin D for any patient on ≥5mg prednisone/day for ≥3 months

Resistance training

Prednisone causes glucocorticoid myopathy, muscle breakdown, particularly in proximal muscles. Weight-bearing exercise and resistance training are protective of bone density and muscle mass during steroid use.

Exercise is protective against glucocorticoid-induced osteoporosis and myopathy; study data generally come from long-term steroid users in RA and transplant populations

Blood glucose monitoring

Strong

Not a treatment, but critical patient education: checking blood sugar during prednisone courses allows early detection of steroid-induced hyperglycemia before it becomes severe. Even non-diabetics may develop significant glucose elevation.

Steroid-induced hyperglycemia is underdiagnosed and undertreated in hospital and outpatient settings; monitoring allows appropriate intervention

Global Prescribing & Pricing

Corticosteroids are among the most universally used drug classes globally; prescribing culture varies but the drug itself is universally accessible as a generic

🇺🇸

United States

$10–25/mo

Rate

Frequently prescribed for short courses, dental, sinus, back pain, poison ivy. Long-term use with biologics increasingly scrutinized.

Policy

No specific restrictions; steroid-sparing strategies now emphasized in most major disease guidelines

Cover

Covered universally as generic

🇬🇧

United Kingdom

~$2–5/mo

Rate

NICE guidelines emphasize short course use; steroid cards issued for patients on long-term steroids to prevent adrenal crisis

Policy

NHS requires steroid alert cards for patients on prolonged corticosteroid therapy

Cover

Covered by NHS

🇩🇪

Germany

~$3–8/mo

Rate

Similar prescribing culture; emphasis on documenting cumulative corticosteroid exposure and bone protection

Policy

German guidelines recommend bone protection (calcium, D3, bisphosphonates) concurrent with long-term steroid courses

Cover

Covered by GKV

🇯🇵

Japan

~$3–10/mo

Rate

High prevalence of glucocorticoid use in Japan for rheumatic conditions; close monitoring standard practice

Policy

Japanese guidelines have established strict protocols for glucocorticoid-induced osteoporosis prevention

Cover

Covered by JHIS

🇧🇷

Brazil

~$1–5/mo

Rate

Widely used; some concern about over-the-counter availability in informal markets

Policy

Prescription required but availability varies; misuse including athletic use is documented

Cover

Covered by SUS for indicated conditions

The UK's practice of issuing steroid alert cards, and the associated patient and provider awareness about adrenal crisis risk from abrupt discontinuation, represents a clear patient safety advance. Most US patients finish a prednisone burst pack with no understanding that their adrenal glands may have been suppressed, and no guidance on warning signs of adrenal insufficiency.

Clinical Trials & Funding

Understanding who funds research helps contextualize results. Industry-funded trials are not automatically invalid - they undergo the same FDA review - but declared conflicts and sponsor effects are worth knowing. All linked trials can be verified on ClinicalTrials.gov.

Key Efficacy Results

Effective at rapidly reducing inflammation across many conditions. Short courses (< 3 weeks) carry lower systemic risk than long-term use. Even short courses can suppress adrenal function in some patients. Long-term use carries substantial cumulative risk for metabolic, bone, and immune complications.

Evidence & Transparency

Cochrane RoB-2 (Risk of Bias)

Badges reflect an editorial assessment using Cochrane's RoB-2 tool domains: randomization, intervention deviation, missing data, outcome measurement, and selective reporting. These are not certified Cochrane reviews. Learn more ↗

CMS Open Payments

Manufacturer payment disclosures are reported via the CMS Sunshine Act. Disclosure is legally required and does not imply bias or misconduct. Language uses "may," "suggests," or "appears", never definitive clinical claims. CMS Open Payments ↗

Live Clinical Trials

Live from ClinicalTrials.gov · refreshed every 4 hours

Currently enrolling, active, and recently completed studies involving Prednisone. Data is pulled directly from the U.S. National Library of Medicine.

Recent Research

Live from PubMed · peer-reviewed literature · refreshed every 4 hours

Most recently indexed clinical trials and systematic reviews mentioning Prednisone in PubMed.

Source Documentation

Structured citations for referenced clinical trials

Each referenced trial is listed with its registry ID, funding source, and bias assessment. Use the copy button to generate a formatted citation.

TrialRegistry IDCite
Early RA: Prednisone Disease Modification (Lancet 1995)PMID:3887627
HPA Axis Suppression with Short CoursesPMID:11687956
Corticosteroids & Fracture Risk Meta-analysisPMID:23669244

Bias ratings use Cochrane RoB-2 methodology. Editorial assessment - not a certified Cochrane review.

Our Methodology

Common Side Effects

While taking this medication, you may experience the following common side effects. We've included tips on how to manage them.

Elevated blood glucose

20-50%

Blood sugar rises within hours of the first dose. Diabetics must monitor more frequently and may need medication adjustment. Even non-diabetics can experience significant glucose elevation.

Increased appetite / weight gain

30-50%

Prednisone stimulates appetite through direct CNS effects and shifts fat storage toward the abdomen and face (cushingoid distribution). This is a pharmacological effect, not a behavioral one.

Insomnia / sleep disruption

30%

Take prednisone in the morning with food to reduce nighttime stimulation. Discuss melatonin or sleep hygiene strategies with your provider if needed.

Mood changes / irritability / euphoria

20-30%

Corticosteroids directly affect mood, ranging from irritability to euphoria to, at high doses, psychiatric symptoms. Tell your provider if mood changes are significant.

Fluid retention / swelling

20%

Prednisone causes sodium and water retention. Reducing sodium intake during steroid courses may help minimize swelling.

Increased blood pressure

15-20%

Related to sodium retention and vascular effects. Monitor blood pressure during steroid courses, especially with existing hypertension.

Heartburn / GI irritation

15%

Always take prednisone with food. A PPI (omeprazole) is often prescribed alongside for courses >2 weeks or if NSAIDs are also being used.

Muscle weakness (myopathy)

5-10% with long-term use

Corticosteroid myopathy affects proximal muscles (thighs, shoulders) and is dose- and duration-dependent. Resistance training may partially mitigate.

Acne / skin thinning

10%

Dose-dependent; usually resolves after stopping. Skin thinning with long-term use is more persistent.

Bone loss (osteoporosis)

Significant with >3 months use

Glucocorticoid-induced osteoporosis is one of the leading causes of medication-related fracture. Calcium, vitamin D, and weight-bearing exercise are important; bisphosphonates may be added for long-term courses.

Serious Adverse Effects

  • Adrenal insufficiency on abrupt discontinuation (potentially life-threatening)
  • Avascular necrosis (bone death, particularly at the hip), associated with longer-term courses
  • Severe infections, prednisone suppresses immune function; infections can be masked and progress rapidly
  • Cataracts and glaucoma, with prolonged use
  • Psychiatric symptoms (steroid psychosis), at high doses
  • Osteoporotic fractures, with chronic use
  • Hyperglycemia-induced diabetic ketoacidosis in predisposed patients

Drug Interactions

Major Interactions (Avoid)

NSAIDs (ibuprofen, naproxen)Dramatically increases GI bleeding risk, combining corticosteroids with NSAIDs significantly increases the risk of GI ulcer and hemorrhage; add a PPI if both are necessary
Live vaccines (MMR, varicella, shingles)Contraindicated, immunosuppression from prednisone can cause disseminated infection from live vaccines; timing must be coordinated with your provider
WarfarinVariable interaction, corticosteroids can both increase and decrease warfarin effect; monitor INR closely with any prednisone course

Moderate Interactions (Caution)

Insulin / antidiabeticsPrednisone raises blood glucose significantly, often by 40-200+ mg/dL; insulin and diabetes medication doses typically need to be increased during steroid courses
Antifungals (ketoconazole, fluconazole)Increase prednisone blood levels by inhibiting its metabolism
Antiepileptics (phenytoin, carbamazepine)Reduce prednisone effectiveness by accelerating its metabolism
Fluoroquinolone antibiotics (ciprofloxacin)Additive tendon rupture risk, avoid this combination in older adults especially

Food Interactions

AlcoholAdditive GI irritation and ulcer risk; also adds to immunosuppression; avoid during prednisone courses
High-sodium foodsPrednisone causes sodium retention and fluid retention, high salt intake worsens this, raising blood pressure and causing swelling
Sugar / refined carbohydratesPrednisone significantly raises blood glucose; high-glycemic foods compound this effect, particularly in diabetics or pre-diabetics

When to Contact Your Doctor

This medication requires ongoing medical supervision. The following situations warrant a prompt conversation with your prescribing physician - do not wait for your next scheduled appointment.

Contact soon if you notice

  • Adrenal insufficiency on abrupt discontinuation (potentially life-threatening)
  • Avascular necrosis (bone death, particularly at the hip), associated with longer-term courses
  • Severe infections, prednisone suppresses immune function; infections can be masked and progress rapidly
  • Cataracts and glaucoma, with prolonged use
  • Profound, unusual fatigue or weakness

Also discuss if you want to

  • Review whether this medication is still appropriate for you
  • Consider dosage adjustments based on response
  • Explore lifestyle or non-drug alternatives
  • Understand stopping or tapering options
  • Plan monitoring labs and follow-up

In the US, call 911 or go to the nearest emergency room for severe symptoms. Poison Control: 1-800-222-1222.

Special Populations

Safety classifications for specific groups - discuss with your provider before use.

Use With CautionPregnancy

Prednisone is used in pregnancy for specific conditions (severe asthma, lupus flares, hyperemesis) when benefit outweighs risk. Associated with cleft palate risk in first trimester at high doses and with premature birth. Monitor closely.

Generally Compatible at Low DosesBreastfeeding

Low-dose prednisone (≤20mg/day) is generally considered compatible with breastfeeding; waiting 4 hours after a dose further reduces infant exposure.

Compounded Metabolic Risk Post-MenopauseMenopause / Hormonal

Estrogen loss at menopause already increases bone loss, central fat deposition, and insulin resistance. Prednisone amplifies all three of these effects. Even short courses of prednisone carry greater metabolic consequence in postmenopausal women, particularly regarding bone density and blood glucose. Discuss calcium, vitamin D, and blood glucose monitoring with your provider before and during any steroid course.

Use With CautionChildren & Teens

Prednisone suppresses growth in children with extended use, even at relatively low doses. Use the shortest course at the lowest effective dose.

Higher Risk ProfileOlder Adults

Older adults are at significantly higher risk of steroid-related complications: osteoporosis, glucose dysregulation, delirium, tendon rupture, and falls. Any prednisone course in an older patient warrants careful monitoring.

Use With CautionKidney Disease

Fluid retention from prednisone may worsen existing kidney disease and hypertension. Monitor kidney function and blood pressure during courses.

FDA Adverse Event Reports

Patient-filed reports from the FDA FAERS database · refreshed daily

Anecdotal data. Reports are not confirmed causation. Always consult your provider.

Community Reports

User-reported experiences - anonymous & anecdotal

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Premium subscribers can share their experience and confirm others' reports.

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Stopping This Medication Safely

Never Stop Abruptly, Adrenal Crisis RiskDocumented timeframe: 2 weeks to several months depending on course duration, dose, and individual adrenal response

Exogenous prednisone suppresses the adrenal gland's own cortisol production through negative feedback on the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis. Stopping abruptly after any course longer than approximately 3 weeks leaves the body without adequate cortisol, potentially causing adrenal crisis, which can be life-threatening. Even short "dose pack" courses have been associated with HPA suppression in susceptible individuals.

What Published Research Shows About Stopping This Medication

This summarizes what published research documents, it is not personal medical advice. Any changes to your medication require discussion with your prescribing physician.

  • ·Research documents that abrupt discontinuation after any course exceeding 2-3 weeks carries risk of adrenal insufficiency, medical guidance for stopping is consistently supported
  • ·For short courses (< 2 weeks at moderate doses), published guidance describes stepping down within the pack as usually sufficient; monitoring for fatigue and weakness is recommended
  • ·For longer courses, published protocols describe reducing by 1-2.5mg every 1-2 weeks, with slower reductions for longer courses or higher starting doses
  • ·Research suggests blood glucose monitoring is useful during stopping, rapidly falling glucose levels can indicate adrenal recovery
  • ·Morning cortisol testing 4-6 weeks after stopping is documented as a method to confirm HPA axis recovery in high-risk patients

Warning Symptoms, Contact Your Doctor If You Experience:

  • Profound, unusual fatigue or weakness
  • Nausea, vomiting, or abdominal pain without other explanation
  • Dizziness or fainting (low blood pressure)
  • Fever unexplained by infection
  • Severe muscle or joint pain, inflammatory condition may also be returning

Never change or stop a medication without consulting your prescribing physician.

Questions for Your Doctor

$2.99, printable guide for your next appointment

Questions to Ask

  • 1.What is the specific condition being treated, and how long do I realistically need this medication?
  • 2.Is there a steroid-sparing agent that could reduce how much prednisone I need long-term?
  • 3.Should I be monitoring my blood sugar during this course, especially if I am diabetic or pre-diabetic?
  • 4.What bone protection measures should I take if this is going to be more than 3 weeks?
  • 5.What are the signs of adrenal insufficiency, and do I need a steroid alert card?

Lab Tests to Request

  • Fasting blood glucose (before and during course)
  • Bone density scan (DEXA) if long-term use anticipated
  • Blood pressure monitoring
  • Calcium and Vitamin D levels
  • Morning cortisol (if stopping after extended use, to assess adrenal recovery)
  • Eye pressure check (tonometry) for long-term users due to glaucoma risk

Medical Disclaimer

The information on this page is compiled from publicly available clinical trial data, FDA prescribing information, and peer-reviewed literature. It is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment recommendations. Individual responses to medications vary. Always consult a qualified healthcare provider before starting, stopping, or changing any medication.

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