Dougall Dominic, Poole Norman, Agrawal Niruj
Newham Centre for Mental Health, East London NHS Foundation Trust, Glen Road, Cherry Tree Way, London, UK, E13 8SP.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2015 Dec 1;2015(12):CD009221. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD009221.pub2.
Traumatic brain injury (TBI) is a major cause of chronic disability. Worldwide, it is the leading cause of disability in the under 40s, resulting in severe disability in some 150 to 200 million people per annum. In addition to mood and behavioural problems, cognition-particularly memory, attention and executive function-are commonly impaired by TBI. Cognitive problems following TBI are one of the most important factors in determining people's subjective well-being and their quality of life. Drugs are widely used in an attempt to improve cognitive functions. Whilst cholinergic agents in TBI have been reviewed, there has not yet been a systematic review or meta-analysis of the effect on chronic cognitive problems of all centrally acting pharmacological agents.
To assess the effects of centrally acting pharmacological agents for treatment of chronic cognitive impairment subsequent to traumatic brain injury in adults.
We searched ALOIS-the Cochrane Dementia and Cognitive Improvement Group's Specialised Register-on 16 November 2013, 23 February 2013, 20 January 2014, and 30 December 2014 using the terms: traumatic OR TBI OR "brain injury" OR "brain injuries" OR TBIs OR "axonal injury" OR "axonal injuries". ALOIS contains records of clinical trials identified from monthly searches of a number of major healthcare databases, numerous trial registries and grey literature sources. Supplementary searches were also performed in MEDLINE, EMBASE, PsycINFO, The Cochrane Library, CINAHL, LILACs, ClinicalTrials.gov, the World Health Organization (WHO) Portal (ICTRP) and Web of Science with conference proceedings.
We included randomised controlled trials (RCTs) assessing the effectiveness of any one centrally acting pharmacological agent that affects one or more of the main neurotransmitter systems in people with chronic traumatic brain injury; and there had to be a minimum of 12 months between the injury and entry into the trial.
Two review authors examined titles and abstracts of citations obtained from the search. Relevant articles were retrieved for further assessment. A bibliographic search of relevant papers was conducted. We extracted data using a standardised tool, which included data on the incidence of adverse effects. Where necessary we requested additional unpublished data from study authors. Risk of bias was assessed by a single author.
Only four studies met the criteria for inclusion, with a total of 274 participants. Four pharmacological agents were investigated: modafinil (51 participants); (-)-OSU6162, a monoamine stabiliser (12 participants of which six had a TBI); atomoxetine (60 participants); and rivastigmine (157 participants). A meta-analysis could not be performed due to the small number and heterogeneity of the studies.All studies examined cognitive performance, with the majority of the psychometric sub-tests showing no difference between treatment and placebo (n = 274, very low quality evidence). For (-)-OSU6162 modest superiority over placebo was demonstrated on three measures, but markedly inferior performance on another. Rivastigmine was better than placebo on one primary measure, and a single cognitive outcome in a secondary analysis of a subgroup with more severe memory impairment at baseline. The study of modafinil assessed clinical global improvement (n = 51, low quality evidence), and did not find any difference between treatment and placebo. Safety, as measured by adverse events, was reported by all studies (n = 274, very low quality evidence), with significantly more nausea reported by participants who received rivastigmine compared to placebo. There were no other differences in safety between treatment and placebo. No studies reported any deaths.
AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: There is insufficient evidence to determine whether pharmacological treatment is effective in chronic cognitive impairment in TBI. Whilst there is a positive finding for rivastigmine on one primary measure, all other primary measures were not better than placebo. The positive findings for (-)-OSU6162 are interpreted cautiously as the study was small (n = 6). For modafinil and atomoxetine no positive effects were found. All four drugs appear to be relatively well tolerated, although evidence is sparse.
创伤性脑损伤(TBI)是导致慢性残疾的主要原因。在全球范围内,它是40岁以下人群残疾的首要原因,每年约有1.5亿至2亿人因此导致严重残疾。除了情绪和行为问题外,认知功能,尤其是记忆、注意力和执行功能,通常会受到TBI的损害。TBI后的认知问题是决定人们主观幸福感和生活质量的最重要因素之一。药物被广泛用于试图改善认知功能。虽然已经对TBI中的胆碱能药物进行了综述,但尚未对所有中枢作用药物对慢性认知问题的影响进行系统综述或荟萃分析。
评估中枢作用药物治疗成人创伤性脑损伤后慢性认知障碍的效果。
我们于2013年11月16日、2013年2月23日、2014年1月20日和2014年12月30日使用以下检索词检索了ALOIS(Cochrane痴呆与认知改善小组的专业注册库):创伤性或TBI或“脑损伤”或“脑损伤”或TBIs或“轴索损伤”或“轴索损伤”。ALOIS包含通过每月搜索多个主要医疗保健数据库、众多试验注册库和灰色文献来源确定的临床试验记录。还在MEDLINE、EMBASE、PsycINFO、Cochrane图书馆、CINAHL、LILACs、ClinicalTrials.gov、世界卫生组织(WHO)门户(ICTRP)和科学网会议论文集中进行了补充检索。
我们纳入了随机对照试验(RCT),评估任何一种影响慢性创伤性脑损伤患者一个或多个主要神经递质系统的中枢作用药物的有效性;并且损伤与进入试验之间必须至少间隔12个月。
两位综述作者检查了从检索中获得的文献的标题和摘要。检索出相关文章进行进一步评估。对相关论文进行了文献检索。我们使用标准化工具提取数据,其中包括不良反应发生率的数据。必要时,我们向研究作者索取额外的未发表数据。由一位作者评估偏倚风险。
只有四项研究符合纳入标准,共有274名参与者。研究了四种药物:莫达非尼(51名参与者);(-)-OSU6162,一种单胺稳定剂(12名参与者,其中6名患有TBI);托莫西汀(60名参与者);以及卡巴拉汀(157名参与者)。由于研究数量少且存在异质性,无法进行荟萃分析。所有研究均检查了认知表现,大多数心理测量子测试显示治疗组与安慰剂组之间无差异(n = 274,证据质量极低)。对于(-)-OSU6162,在三项测量中显示出优于安慰剂的适度优势,但在另一项测量中表现明显较差。卡巴拉汀在一项主要测量中优于安慰剂,并且在基线时记忆损害更严重的亚组的二次分析中的一项认知结果方面也优于安慰剂。莫达非尼的研究评估了临床总体改善情况(n = 51,证据质量低),未发现治疗组与安慰剂组之间有任何差异。所有研究均报告了不良事件衡量的安全性(n = 274,证据质量极低),与安慰剂相比,接受卡巴拉汀的参与者报告的恶心明显更多。治疗组与安慰剂组在安全性方面没有其他差异。没有研究报告任何死亡病例。
没有足够的证据来确定药物治疗对TBI慢性认知障碍是否有效。虽然卡巴拉汀在一项主要测量中有阳性发现,但所有其他主要测量结果并不比安慰剂更好。对(-)-OSU6162的阳性发现应谨慎解释,因为该研究规模较小(n = 6)。对于莫达非尼和托莫西汀未发现阳性效果。尽管证据稀少,但所有四种药物似乎耐受性相对较好。