Winfield Naomi R, Barker Nicola J, Turner Esme R, Quin Gemma L
Physiotherapy Department, Milton Keynes Hospital NHS Foundation Trust, Milton Keynes, Buckinghamshire, UK.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2014 Oct 19;2014(10):CD010382. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD010382.pub2.
Children with severe global developmental delay (SGDD) have significant intellectual disability and severe motor impairment; they are extremely limited in their functional movement and are dependent upon others for all activities of daily living. SGDD does not directly cause lung dysfunction, but the combination of immobility, weakness, skeletal deformity and parenchymal damage from aspiration can lead to significant prevalence of respiratory illness. Respiratory pathology is a significant cause of morbidity and mortality for children with SGDD; it can result in frequent hospital admissions and impacts upon quality of life. Although many treatment approaches are available, there currently exists no comprehensive review of the literature to inform best practice. A broad range of treatment options exist; to focus the scope of this review and allow in-depth analysis, we have excluded pharmaceutical interventions.
To assess the effects of non-pharmaceutical treatment modalities for the management of respiratory morbidity in children with severe global developmental delay.
We conducted comprehensive searches of the following databases from inception to November 2013: the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (CENTRAL), MEDLINE, EMBASE, the Allied and Complementary Medicine Database (AMED) and the Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature (CINAHL). We searched the Web of Science and clinical trials registries for grey literature and for planned, ongoing and unpublished trials. We checked the reference lists of all primary included studies for additional relevant references.
Randomised controlled trials, controlled trials and cohort studies of children up to 18 years of age with a diagnosis of severe neurological impairment and respiratory morbidity were included. Studies of airways clearance techniques, suction, assisted coughing, non-invasive ventilation, tracheostomy and postural management were eligible for inclusion.
We used standard methodological procedures as expected by The Cochrane Collaboration. As the result of heterogeneity, we could not perform meta-analysis. We have therefore presented our results using a narrative approach.
Fifteen studies were included in the review. Studies included children with a range of severe neurological impairments in differing settings, for example, home and critical care. Several different treatment modalities were assessed, and a wide range of outcome measures were used. Most studies used a non-randomised design and included small sample groups. Only four randomised controlled trials were identified. Non-randomised design, lack of information about how participants were selected and who completed outcome measures and incomplete reporting led to high or unclear risk of bias in many studies. Results from low-quality studies suggest that use of non-invasive ventilation, mechanically assisted coughing, high-frequency chest wall oscillation (HFCWO), positive expiratory pressure and supportive seating may confer potential benefits. No serious adverse effects were reported for ventilatory support or airway clearance interventions other than one incident in a clinically unstable child following mechanically assisted coughing. Night-time positioning equipment and spinal bracing were shown to have a potentially negative effect for some participants. However, these findings must be considered as tentative and require testing in future randomised trials.
AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: This review found no high-quality evidence for any single intervention for the management of respiratory morbidity in children with severe global developmental delay. Our search yielded data on a wide range of interventions of interest. Significant differences in study design and in outcome measures precluded the possibility of meta-analysis. No conclusions on efficacy or safety of interventions for respiratory morbidity in children with severe global developmental delay can be made based upon the findings of this review.A co-ordinated approach to future research is vital to ensure that high-quality evidence becomes available to guide treatment for this vulnerable patient group.
重度全面发育迟缓(SGDD)患儿存在严重智力残疾和重度运动障碍;他们的功能性活动极为受限,日常生活的所有活动都依赖他人。SGDD 本身不会直接导致肺功能障碍,但长期不活动、肌无力、骨骼畸形以及误吸导致的实质损伤相结合,可使呼吸道疾病的患病率显著升高。呼吸道病变是 SGDD 患儿发病和死亡的重要原因;可导致频繁住院,并影响生活质量。尽管有多种治疗方法可供选择,但目前尚无全面的文献综述来指导最佳实践。治疗选择范围广泛;为限定本综述的范围并进行深入分析,我们排除了药物干预措施。
评估非药物治疗方式对重度全面发育迟缓患儿呼吸道疾病的治疗效果。
我们对以下数据库进行了全面检索,检索时间从建库至 2013 年 11 月:Cochrane 对照试验中心注册库(CENTRAL)、医学期刊数据库(MEDLINE)、荷兰医学文摘数据库(EMBASE)、补充与替代医学数据库(AMED)以及护理学与健康照护领域累积索引数据库(CINAHL)。我们在科学网和临床试验注册库中检索灰色文献以及计划中、进行中的和未发表的试验。我们查阅了所有纳入的主要研究的参考文献列表以获取其他相关参考文献。
纳入对 18 岁及以下诊断为重度神经功能障碍且患有呼吸道疾病的儿童进行的随机对照试验、对照试验和队列研究。气道清理技术、吸痰、辅助咳嗽、无创通气、气管造口术和体位管理的研究符合纳入标准。
我们采用了 Cochrane 协作网所期望的标准方法程序进行。由于存在异质性,我们无法进行荟萃分析。因此,我们采用叙述性方法呈现结果。
本综述纳入了 15 项研究。这些研究纳入了在不同环境(如家庭和重症监护病房)中患有一系列重度神经功能障碍的儿童。评估了几种不同的治疗方式,并使用了广泛的结局指标。大多数研究采用非随机设计,且样本量较小。仅识别出 4 项随机对照试验。非随机设计、缺乏关于参与者如何选择以及谁完成结局指标的信息以及报告不完整导致许多研究存在高偏倚风险或偏倚风险不明确。低质量研究的结果表明,使用无创通气、机械辅助咳嗽、高频胸壁振荡(HFCWO)、呼气末正压和支撑性座椅可能带来潜在益处。除了 1 例在机械辅助咳嗽后临床不稳定患儿出现的不良事件外,未报告通气支持或气道清理干预措施有严重不良反应。夜间定位设备和脊柱支撑对一些参与者显示出潜在的负面影响。然而,这些发现必须视为初步结果,需要在未来的随机试验中进行验证。
本综述未发现有高质量证据支持对重度全面发育迟缓患儿呼吸道疾病进行任何单一干预。我们的检索得到了一系列相关干预措施的数据。研究设计和结局指标存在显著差异,排除荟萃分析的可能性。基于本综述的结果,无法就重度全面发育迟缓患儿呼吸道疾病干预措施的疗效或安全性得出结论。未来研究采用协调一致的方法对于确保获得高质量证据以指导这一脆弱患者群体的治疗至关重要。