Jefferson Tom, Jones Mark A, Doshi Peter, Del Mar Chris B, Hama Rokuro, Thompson Matthew J, Spencer Elizabeth A, Onakpoya Igho, Mahtani Kamal R, Nunan David, Howick Jeremy, Heneghan Carl J
The Cochrane Collaboration, Via Puglie 23, Roma, Italy, 00187.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2014 Apr 10;2014(4):CD008965. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD008965.pub4.
Neuraminidase inhibitors (NIs) are stockpiled and recommended by public health agencies for treating and preventing seasonal and pandemic influenza. They are used clinically worldwide.
To describe the potential benefits and harms of NIs for influenza in all age groups by reviewing all clinical study reports of published and unpublished randomised, placebo-controlled trials and regulatory comments.
We searched trial registries, electronic databases (to 22 July 2013) and regulatory archives, and corresponded with manufacturers to identify all trials. We also requested clinical study reports. We focused on the primary data sources of manufacturers but we checked that there were no published randomised controlled trials (RCTs) from non-manufacturer sources by running electronic searches in the following databases: the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (CENTRAL), MEDLINE, MEDLINE (Ovid), EMBASE, Embase.com, PubMed (not MEDLINE), the Database of Reviews of Effects, the NHS Economic Evaluation Database and the Health Economic Evaluations Database.
Randomised, placebo-controlled trials on adults and children with confirmed or suspected exposure to naturally occurring influenza.
We extracted clinical study reports and assessed risk of bias using purpose-built instruments. We analysed the effects of zanamivir and oseltamivir on time to first alleviation of symptoms, influenza outcomes, complications, hospitalisations and adverse events in the intention-to-treat (ITT) population. All trials were sponsored by the manufacturers.
We obtained 107 clinical study reports from the European Medicines Agency (EMA), GlaxoSmithKline and Roche. We accessed comments by the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA), EMA and Japanese regulator. We included 53 trials in Stage 1 (a judgement of appropriate study design) and 46 in Stage 2 (formal analysis), including 20 oseltamivir (9623 participants) and 26 zanamivir trials (14,628 participants). Inadequate reporting put most of the zanamivir studies and half of the oseltamivir studies at a high risk of selection bias. There were inadequate measures in place to protect 11 studies of oseltamivir from performance bias due to non-identical presentation of placebo. Attrition bias was high across the oseltamivir studies and there was also evidence of selective reporting for both the zanamivir and oseltamivir studies. The placebo interventions in both sets of trials may have contained active substances. Time to first symptom alleviation. For the treatment of adults, oseltamivir reduced the time to first alleviation of symptoms by 16.8 hours (95% confidence interval (CI) 8.4 to 25.1 hours, P < 0.0001). This represents a reduction in the time to first alleviation of symptoms from 7 to 6.3 days. There was no effect in asthmatic children, but in otherwise healthy children there was (reduction by a mean difference of 29 hours, 95% CI 12 to 47 hours, P = 0.001). Zanamivir reduced the time to first alleviation of symptoms in adults by 0.60 days (95% CI 0.39 to 0.81 days, P < 0.00001), equating to a reduction in the mean duration of symptoms from 6.6 to 6.0 days. The effect in children was not significant. In subgroup analysis we found no evidence of a difference in treatment effect for zanamivir on time to first alleviation of symptoms in adults in the influenza-infected and non-influenza-infected subgroups (P = 0.53). Hospitalisations. Treatment of adults with oseltamivir had no significant effect on hospitalisations: risk difference (RD) 0.15% (95% CI -0.78 to 0.91). There was also no significant effect in children or in prophylaxis. Zanamivir hospitalisation data were unreported. Serious influenza complications or those leading to study withdrawal. In adult treatment trials, oseltamivir did not significantly reduce those complications classified as serious or those which led to study withdrawal (RD 0.07%, 95% CI -0.78 to 0.44), nor in child treatment trials; neither did zanamivir in the treatment of adults or in prophylaxis. There were insufficient events to compare this outcome for oseltamivir in prophylaxis or zanamivir in the treatment of children. Pneumonia. Oseltamivir significantly reduced self reported, investigator-mediated, unverified pneumonia (RD 1.00%, 95% CI 0.22 to 1.49); number needed to treat to benefit (NNTB) = 100 (95% CI 67 to 451) in the treated population. The effect was not significant in the five trials that used a more detailed diagnostic form for pneumonia. There were no definitions of pneumonia (or other complications) in any trial. No oseltamivir treatment studies reported effects on radiologically confirmed pneumonia. There was no significant effect on unverified pneumonia in children. There was no significant effect of zanamivir on either self reported or radiologically confirmed pneumonia. In prophylaxis, zanamivir significantly reduced the risk of self reported, investigator-mediated, unverified pneumonia in adults (RD 0.32%, 95% CI 0.09 to 0.41); NNTB = 311 (95% CI 244 to 1086), but not oseltamivir. Bronchitis, sinusitis and otitis media. Zanamivir significantly reduced the risk of bronchitis in adult treatment trials (RD 1.80%, 95% CI 0.65 to 2.80); NNTB = 56 (36 to 155), but not oseltamivir. Neither NI significantly reduced the risk of otitis media and sinusitis in both adults and children. Harms of treatment. Oseltamivir in the treatment of adults increased the risk of nausea (RD 3.66%, 95% CI 0.90 to 7.39); number needed to treat to harm (NNTH) = 28 (95% CI 14 to 112) and vomiting (RD 4.56%, 95% CI 2.39 to 7.58); NNTH = 22 (14 to 42). The proportion of participants with four-fold increases in antibody titre was significantly lower in the treated group compared to the control group (RR 0.92, 95% CI 0.86 to 0.97, I(2) statistic = 0%) (5% absolute difference between arms). Oseltamivir significantly decreased the risk of diarrhoea (RD 2.33%, 95% CI 0.14 to 3.81); NNTB = 43 (95% CI 27 to 709) and cardiac events (RD 0.68%, 95% CI 0.04 to 1.0); NNTB = 148 (101 to 2509) compared to placebo during the on-treatment period. There was a dose-response effect on psychiatric events in the two oseltamivir "pivotal" treatment trials, WV15670 and WV15671, at 150 mg (standard dose) and 300 mg daily (high dose) (P = 0.038). In the treatment of children, oseltamivir induced vomiting (RD 5.34%, 95% CI 1.75 to 10.29); NNTH = 19 (95% CI 10 to 57). There was a significantly lower proportion of children on oseltamivir with a four-fold increase in antibodies (RR 0.90, 95% CI 0.80 to 1.00, I(2) = 0%). Prophylaxis. In prophylaxis trials, oseltamivir and zanamivir reduced the risk of symptomatic influenza in individuals (oseltamivir: RD 3.05% (95% CI 1.83 to 3.88); NNTB = 33 (26 to 55); zanamivir: RD 1.98% (95% CI 0.98 to 2.54); NNTB = 51 (40 to 103)) and in households (oseltamivir: RD 13.6% (95% CI 9.52 to 15.47); NNTB = 7 (6 to 11); zanamivir: RD 14.84% (95% CI 12.18 to 16.55); NNTB = 7 (7 to 9)). There was no significant effect on asymptomatic influenza (oseltamivir: RR 1.14 (95% CI 0.39 to 3.33); zanamivir: RR 0.97 (95% CI 0.76 to 1.24)). Non-influenza, influenza-like illness could not be assessed due to data not being fully reported. In oseltamivir prophylaxis studies, psychiatric adverse events were increased in the combined on- and off-treatment periods (RD 1.06%, 95% CI 0.07 to 2.76); NNTH = 94 (95% CI 36 to 1538) in the study treatment population. Oseltamivir increased the risk of headaches whilst on treatment (RD 3.15%, 95% CI 0.88 to 5.78); NNTH = 32 (95% CI 18 to 115), renal events whilst on treatment (RD 0.67%, 95% CI -2.93 to 0.01); NNTH = 150 (NNTH 35 to NNTB > 1000) and nausea whilst on treatment (RD 4.15%, 95% CI 0.86 to 9.51); NNTH = 25 (95% CI 11 to 116).
AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: Oseltamivir and zanamivir have small, non-specific effects on reducing the time to alleviation of influenza symptoms in adults, but not in asthmatic children. Using either drug as prophylaxis reduces the risk of developing symptomatic influenza. Treatment trials with oseltamivir or zanamivir do not settle the question of whether the complications of influenza (such as pneumonia) are reduced, because of a lack of diagnostic definitions. The use of oseltamivir increases the risk of adverse effects, such as nausea, vomiting, psychiatric effects and renal events in adults and vomiting in children. The lower bioavailability may explain the lower toxicity of zanamivir compared to oseltamivir. The balance between benefits and harms should be considered when making decisions about use of both NIs for either the prophylaxis or treatment of influenza. The influenza virus-specific mechanism of action proposed by the producers does not fit the clinical evidence.
神经氨酸酶抑制剂(NIs)被公共卫生机构储备并推荐用于治疗和预防季节性流感及大流行性流感,在全球范围内广泛应用于临床。
通过回顾已发表和未发表的随机、安慰剂对照试验的所有临床研究报告及监管意见,描述NIs对各年龄组流感的潜在益处和危害。
我们检索了试验注册库、电子数据库(截至2013年7月22日)和监管档案,并与制造商联系以识别所有试验。我们还索要了临床研究报告。我们重点关注制造商的主要数据源,但通过在以下数据库进行电子检索,检查是否有非制造商来源的已发表随机对照试验(RCT):Cochrane对照试验中心注册库(CENTRAL)、MEDLINE、MEDLINE(Ovid)、EMBASE、Embase.com、PubMed(非MEDLINE)、疗效评价数据库、英国国家卫生服务体系经济评价数据库和卫生经济评价数据库。
针对确诊或疑似自然感染流感的成人和儿童进行的随机、安慰剂对照试验。
我们提取了临床研究报告,并使用专门设计的工具评估偏倚风险。我们在意向性治疗(ITT)人群中分析了扎那米韦和奥司他韦对首次症状缓解时间、流感结局、并发症、住院和不良事件的影响。所有试验均由制造商赞助。
我们从欧洲药品管理局(EMA)、葛兰素史克和罗氏公司获得了107份临床研究报告。我们获取了美国食品药品监督管理局(FDA)、EMA和日本监管机构的意见。我们纳入了53项处于第1阶段(适当研究设计的判断)的试验和46项处于第2阶段(正式分析)的试验,包括20项奥司他韦试验(9623名参与者)和26项扎那米韦试验(14628名参与者)。报告不充分使大多数扎那米韦研究和一半的奥司他韦研究存在高度选择偏倚风险。由于安慰剂呈现方式不同,有11项奥司他韦研究缺乏保护其免受执行偏倚的措施。奥司他韦研究中的失访偏倚较高,扎那米韦和奥司他韦研究均有选择性报告的证据。两组试验中的安慰剂干预可能都含有活性物质。首次症状缓解时间。对于成人治疗,奥司他韦将首次症状缓解时间缩短了16.8小时(95%置信区间(CI)8.4至25.1小时,P<0.0001)。这意味着首次症状缓解时间从7天缩短至6.3天。对哮喘儿童无效,但对其他健康儿童有效(平均差异缩短29小时,95%CI 12至47小时,P = 0.001)。扎那米韦使成人首次症状缓解时间缩短了0.60天(95%CI 0.39至0.81天,P<0.00001),相当于症状平均持续时间从6.6天缩短至6.0天。对儿童的影响不显著。在亚组分析中,我们未发现扎那米韦对流感感染和未感染亚组成人首次症状缓解时间的治疗效果存在差异的证据(P = 0.53)。住院情况。用奥司他韦治疗成人对住院情况无显著影响:风险差异(RD)0.15%(95%CI -0.78至0.91)。对儿童或预防也无显著影响。扎那米韦的住院数据未报告。严重流感并发症或导致研究退出的并发症。在成人治疗试验中,奥司他韦并未显著降低被归类为严重或导致研究退出的并发症(RD 0.07%,95%CI -0.78至0.44),儿童治疗试验中也未降低;扎那米韦在成人治疗或预防中也未降低。奥司他韦预防或扎那米韦儿童治疗中该结局的事件数量不足,无法进行比较。肺炎。奥司他韦显著降低了自我报告、研究者介导、未经核实的肺炎(RD 1.00%,95%CI 0.22至1.49);治疗人群中获益所需治疗人数(NNTB) = 100(95%CI 67至451)。在使用更详细肺炎诊断表格的五项试验中,该效果不显著。任何试验中均未对肺炎(或其他并发症)进行定义。没有奥司他韦治疗研究报告对经放射学证实的肺炎的影响。对儿童未经核实的肺炎无显著影响。扎那米韦对自我报告或经放射学证实的肺炎均无显著影响。在预防方面,扎那米韦显著降低了成人自我报告、研究者介导、未经核实的肺炎风险(RD 0.32%,95%CI 0.09至0.41);NNTB = 311(95%CI 244至1086),但奥司他韦未降低。支气管炎、鼻窦炎和中耳炎。扎那米韦在成人治疗试验中显著降低了支气管炎风险(RD 1.80%,95%CI 0.65至2.80);NNTB = 56(36至155),但奥司他韦未降低。两种NI对成人和儿童的中耳炎和鼻窦炎风险均未显著降低。治疗危害。奥司他韦治疗成人增加了恶心风险(RD 3.66%,95%CI 0.90至7.39);伤害所需治疗人数(NNTH) = 28(95%CI 14至112)和呕吐风险(RD 4.56%,95%CI 2.39至7.58);NNTH = 22(14至42)。与对照组相比,治疗组抗体滴度增加四倍的参与者比例显著降低(RR 0.92,95%CI 0.86至0.97,I(2)统计量 = 0%)(两组间绝对差异为5%)。奥司他韦显著降低了腹泻风险(RD 2.