University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ, USA.
Toxicon. 2013 Dec 15;76:377-85. doi: 10.1016/j.toxicon.2013.07.014. Epub 2013 Jul 31.
Envenomation by North American scorpions of genus Centruroides is associated with a syndrome of neurotoxicity and respiratory compromise that disproportionately affects rural children. Severe scorpion envenomation is rare, which makes treatment difficult to study using conventional controlled clinical trials; and small-scale placebo-controlled trials conducted in tertiary centers are of limited generalizability to the community setting. Open label studies, although safer and easier to conduct, are of limited value unless a suitable comparator group is used. Historical controls may be appropriate when concurrent controls are not feasible or ethical.
A successful placebo-controlled, double-blind clinical trial design was adapted for community use in Arizona and Mexico. A comparator population was established by replacement of the placebo group with a retrospective cohort and preservation of criteria for inclusion, exclusion, dosing and endpoint assessment. Study endpoints were selected to demonstrate the clearest possible difference between treatment groups, while minimizing confounders. Results were summarized and endpoints were directly compared between groups and with the prior double-blind study.
The clinical syndrome remained evident in 95.9% of the historical cohort (93/97) 4 h after admission, and their cumulative dose of midazolam given between baseline and discharge was 5.29 ± 8.68 mg/kg (range 0-62.8). Among 78 prospectively treated cases, none received midazolam and only 2 (2.8%) remained symptomatic at 4 h. Venom was detectable in the plasma of all antivenom recipients tested, and it dropped by 90% of baseline in 95% of cases studied.
The results of this pragmatic study strongly support the findings of the double-blind, placebo controlled clinical trial of the same antivenom. Recipients of antivenom at rural sites improved at a rate similar to that in the intensive care (ICU) setting, and historical cases resolved at a rate similar to that for untreated ICU controls. Use of antivenom in the primary care setting appeared to be safe and effective and to eliminate the need for intensive care or for transport to a tertiary care center, in all subjects prospectively studied.
中美洲扁尾蛛属(Centruroides)的北美洲蝎子蜇伤与神经毒性和呼吸功能障碍综合征有关,这种综合征不成比例地影响农村儿童。严重的蝎子蜇伤很少见,这使得使用传统的对照临床试验来研究治疗变得困难;在三级中心进行的小规模安慰剂对照试验对社区环境的推广性有限。开放标签研究虽然更安全且更容易进行,但除非使用合适的对照组,否则价值有限。当无法或不道德地进行同期对照时,历史对照可能是合适的。
一种成功的安慰剂对照、双盲临床试验设计被改编为亚利桑那州和墨西哥的社区使用。通过用回顾性队列替代安慰剂组并保留纳入、排除、剂量和终点评估标准,建立了一个对照组。选择研究终点以在治疗组之间展示最明显的差异,同时最小化混杂因素。总结结果,并在组间和与先前的双盲研究直接比较终点。
入院后 4 小时,历史队列(93/97)中 95.9%仍表现出明显的临床综合征,他们在入院至出院期间接受咪达唑仑的累积剂量为 5.29±8.68mg/kg(范围 0-62.8)。在 78 例前瞻性治疗的病例中,没有接受咪达唑仑治疗,只有 2 例(2.8%)在 4 小时时仍有症状。在所有接受抗蛇毒血清治疗的患者中均检测到毒液,95%的病例中毒液浓度降至基线的 90%。
这项实用研究的结果强烈支持了同一抗蛇毒血清的双盲、安慰剂对照临床试验的结果。农村地区抗蛇毒血清的接受者的恢复速度与重症监护病房(ICU)中的恢复速度相似,且历史病例的恢复速度与未经治疗的 ICU 对照组相似。在所有前瞻性研究的患者中,在初级保健环境中使用抗蛇毒血清似乎是安全有效的,并且消除了对重症监护或转至三级护理中心的需求。