Southampton Health Technology Assessments Centre, University of Southampton, Southampton, UK.
Health Technol Assess. 2012;16(19):1-316. doi: 10.3310/hta16190.
Severe acute malnutrition (SAM) arises as a consequence of a sudden period of food shortage and is associated with loss of a person's body fat and wasting of their skeletal muscle. Many of those affected are already undernourished and are often susceptible to disease. Infants and young children are the most vulnerable as they require extra nutrition for growth and development, have comparatively limited energy reserves and depend on others. Undernutrition can have drastic and wide-ranging consequences for the child's development and survival in the short and long term. Despite efforts made to treat SAM through different interventions and programmes, it continues to cause unacceptably high levels of mortality and morbidity. Uncertainty remains as to the most effective methods to treat severe acute malnutrition in young children.
To evaluate the effectiveness of interventions to treat infants and children aged < 5 years who have SAM.
Eight databases (MEDLINE, EMBASE, MEDLINE In-Process & Other Non-Indexed Citations, CAB Abstracts Ovid, Bioline, Centre for Reviews and Dissemination, EconLit EBSCO and The Cochrane Library) were searched to 2010. Bibliographies of included articles and grey literature sources were also searched. The project expert advisory group was asked to identify additional published and unpublished references.
Prior to the systematic review, a Delphi process involving international experts prioritised the research questions. Searches were conducted and two reviewers independently screened titles and abstracts for eligibility. Inclusion criteria were applied to the full texts of retrieved papers by one reviewer and checked independently by a second. Included studies were mapped to the research questions. Data extraction and quality assessment were undertaken by one reviewer and checked by a second reviewer. Differences in opinion were resolved through discussion at each stage. Studies were synthesised through a narrative review with tabulation of the results.
A total of 8954 records were screened, 224 full-text articles were retrieved, and 74 articles (describing 68 studies) met the inclusion criteria and were mapped. No evidence focused on treatment of children with SAM who were human immunodeficiency virus sero-positive, and no good-quality or adequately reported studies assessed treatments for SAM among infants < 6 months old. One randomised controlled trial investigated fluid resuscitation solutions for shock, with none adequately treating shock. Children with acute diarrhoea benefited from the use of hypo-osmolar oral rehydration solution (H-ORS) compared with the standard World Health Organization-oral rehydration solution (WHO-ORS). WHO-ORS was not significantly different from rehydration solution for malnutrition (ReSoMal), but the safety of ReSoMal was uncertain. A rice-based ORS was more beneficial than glucose-based ORSs, and provision of zinc plus a WHO-ORS had a favourable impact on diarrhoea and need for ORS. Comparisons of different diets in children with persistent diarrhoea produced conflicting findings. For treating infection, comparison of amoxicillin with ceftriaxone during inpatient therapy, and routine provision of antibiotics for 7 days versus no antibiotics during outpatient therapy of uncomplicated SAM, found that neither had a significant effect on recovery at the end of follow-up. No evidence mapped to the next three questions on factors that affect sustainability of programmes, long-term survival and readmission rates, the clinical effectiveness of management strategies for treating children with comorbidities such as tuberculosis and Helicobacter pylori infection and the factors that limit the full implementation of treatment programmes. Comparison of treatment for SAM in different settings showed that children receiving inpatient care appear to do as well as those in ambulatory or home settings on anthropometric measures and response time to treatment. Longer-term follow-up showed limited differences between the different settings. The majority of evidence on methods for correcting micronutrient deficiencies considered zinc supplements; however, trials were heterogeneous and a firm conclusion about zinc was not reached. There was limited evidence on either supplementary potassium or nicotinic acid (each produced some benefits), and nucleotides (not associated with benefits). Evidence was identified for four of the five remaining questions, but not assessed because of resource limitation.
The systematic review focused on key questions prioritised through a Delphi study and, as a consequence, did not encompass all elements in the management of SAM. In focusing on evidence from controlled studies with the most rigorous designs that were published in the English language, the systematic review may have excluded other forms of evidence. The systematic review identified several limitations in the evidence base for assessing the effectiveness of interventions for treating young children with severe acute malnutrition, including a lack of studies assessing the different interventions; limited details of study methods used; short follow-up post intervention or discharge; and heterogeneity in participants, interventions, settings, and outcome measures affecting generalisability.
For many of the most highly ranked questions evidence was lacking or inconclusive. More research is needed on a range of topic areas concerning the treatment of infants and children with SAM. Further research is required on most aspects of the management of SAM in children < 5 years, including intravenous resuscitation regimens for shock, management of subgroups (e.g. infants < 6 months old, infants and children with SAM who are human immunodeficiency virus sero-positive) and on the use of antibiotics.
严重急性营养不良(SAM)是由于突然的食物短缺引起的,与人体脂肪的丧失和骨骼肌的消耗有关。许多受影响的人已经营养不良,往往容易患病。婴儿和幼儿最脆弱,因为他们需要额外的营养来生长和发育,他们的能量储备相对有限,并且依赖他人。营养不良会对儿童的短期和长期发育和生存产生严重和广泛的影响。尽管通过不同的干预措施和方案努力治疗 SAM,但它仍然导致不可接受的高死亡率和发病率。对于治疗幼儿严重急性营养不良最有效的方法仍存在不确定性。
评估治疗患有 SAM 的 < 5 岁婴儿和儿童的干预措施的有效性。
对 8 个数据库(MEDLINE、EMBASE、MEDLINE In-Process 和其他非索引引文、CAB 摘要 Ovid、Bioline、评论和传播中心、EconLit EBSCO 和 Cochrane 图书馆)进行了搜索,截至 2010 年。还搜索了包括文章和灰色文献来源的参考书目。项目专家咨询小组被要求确定其他已发表和未发表的参考文献。
在系统审查之前,一项涉及国际专家的德尔菲(Delphi)过程确定了研究问题的优先级。进行了搜索,两名评审员独立筛选标题和摘要以确定是否符合入选标准。纳入标准由一名评审员应用于检索论文的全文,并由另一名评审员独立检查。将研究映射到研究问题。数据提取和质量评估由一名评审员进行,另一名评审员进行检查。在每个阶段都通过讨论解决了意见分歧。通过叙述性综述进行研究综合,同时列出结果。
共筛选了 8954 条记录,检索到 224 篇全文文章,其中 74 篇(描述了 68 项研究)符合纳入标准并进行了映射。没有专门针对人类免疫缺陷病毒血清阳性的患有 SAM 的儿童的治疗的研究,也没有高质量或充分报告的研究评估了 6 个月以下婴儿 SAM 的治疗。一项随机对照试验调查了用于休克的液体复苏溶液,没有一种溶液能充分治疗休克。与标准世界卫生组织口服补液溶液(WHO-ORS)相比,急性腹泻的儿童受益于低渗口服补液溶液(H-ORS)。WHO-ORS 与用于营养不良的再水化溶液(ReSoMal)没有显著差异,但 ReSoMal 的安全性不确定。基于大米的 ORS 比基于葡萄糖的 ORS 更有益,而提供锌加 WHO-ORS 对腹泻和需要 ORS 有有利影响。比较持续性腹泻儿童的不同饮食产生了相互矛盾的结果。对于治疗感染,比较住院治疗期间阿莫西林与头孢曲松的效果,以及门诊治疗无并发症 SAM 时常规提供 7 天抗生素与不提供抗生素的效果,发现两者在随访结束时对恢复均无显著影响。没有证据可映射到关于影响方案可持续性、长期生存和再入院率的下三个问题,关于治疗合并结核病和幽门螺杆菌感染等并发症的儿童的管理策略的临床效果,以及限制治疗方案全面实施的因素。比较不同环境中的 SAM 治疗显示,接受住院治疗的儿童在身体测量和治疗反应时间方面与在门诊或家庭环境中治疗的儿童一样好。长期随访显示不同环境之间的差异有限。关于纠正微量营养素缺乏的方法的大部分证据都考虑了锌补充剂;然而,试验存在异质性,因此无法得出关于锌的明确结论。关于补充钾或烟酸(每种都有一些益处)和核苷酸(与益处无关)的证据有限。对于五个剩余问题中的四个,由于资源限制,没有进行评估。
系统审查侧重于通过 Delphi 研究确定的关键问题,并因此没有涵盖 SAM 管理的所有要素。由于重点是具有最严格设计的对照研究的证据,这些研究是用英语发表的,因此系统审查可能排除了其他形式的证据。系统审查确定了评估治疗幼儿严重急性营养不良的干预措施有效性的证据存在几个局限性,包括缺乏评估不同干预措施的研究;研究方法的详细信息有限;干预后或出院后随访时间短;以及参与者、干预措施、环境和结局测量的异质性影响了普遍性。
对于许多排名最高的问题,证据缺乏或不明确。需要对婴儿和儿童严重急性营养不良治疗的许多领域进行更多研究。还需要对儿童 < 5 岁的 SAM 管理的大多数方面进行进一步研究,包括休克的静脉复苏方案、亚组(如 < 6 个月大的婴儿、人类免疫缺陷病毒血清阳性的婴儿和儿童)的管理以及抗生素的使用。