Tuberculosis drugs do not contain hormones, and the main clinical drugs are isoniazid, rifampin, rifapentine, ethambutol, pyrazinamide, etc. These drugs belong to the category of antibiotics, and the combination is mainly for the standardized treatment of tuberculosis. Patients with pulmonary tuberculosis who have a large amount of pleural effusion and repeated high fever, especially repeated pleural aspiration, and whose pleural fluid still grows relatively fast, need to add oral hormones in this case, generally with prednisone as the mainstay. Prednisone with tuberculosis drugs promotes absorption of pleural fluid and reduces pleural adhesions to avoid formation of pleural hypertrophy. However, the use of hormones needs to ensure the effective premise of anti-tuberculosis treatment to avoid hormone suppression of systemic immune response, resulting in the spread of tuberculosis is not easy to control, and even the formation of tuberculous meningitis, pericarditis, allergic arthritis, etc. In short, tuberculosis drugs themselves belong to the category of antibiotics, and can be used in conjunction with hormone therapy if there are special circumstances, but they do not contain hormones per se.