Cleminson Jemma, McGuire William
Academic Clinical Fellow in Child Health NIHR Centre for Reviews & Dissemination, University of York, York, UK.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2016 Jan 29;2016(1):CD001150. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD001150.pub3.
Breakdown of the developmentally immature epidermal barrier may permit entry for micro-organisms leading to invasive infection in preterm infants. Topical emollients may improve skin integrity and barrier function and thereby prevent invasive infection, a major cause of mortality and morbidity in preterm infants.
To assess the effect of topical application of emollients (ointments, creams, or oils) on the incidence of invasive infection, other morbidity, and mortality in preterm infants.
We used the standard search strategy of the Cochrane Neonatal Review group to search the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (CENTRAL 2015, Issue 7), MEDLINE via PubMed (1966 to August 2015), EMBASE (1980 to August 2015), and CINAHL (1982 to August 2015). We also searched clinical trials databases, conference proceedings, previous reviews and the reference lists of retrieved articles for randomised controlled trials and quasi-randomised trials.
Randomised or quasi-randomised controlled trials that assessed the effect of prophylactic application of topical emollient (ointments, creams, or oils) on the incidence of invasive infection, mortality, other morbidity, and growth and development in preterm infants.
Two review authors assessed trial eligibility and risk of bias and undertook data extraction independently. We analysed the treatment effects in the individual trials and reported the risk ratio and risk difference for dichotomous data and mean difference for continuous data, with respective 95% confidence intervals. We used a fixed-effect model in meta-analyses and explored the potential causes of heterogeneity in subgroup analyses.
We identified 18 eligible primary publications (21 trial reports). A total of 3089 infants participated in the trials. The risk of bias varied with lack of clarity on methods to conceal allocation in half of the trials and lack of blinding of caregivers or investigators in all of the trials being the main potential sources of bias.Eight trials (2086 infants) examined the effect of topical ointments or creams. Most participants were very preterm infants cared for in health-care facilities in high-income countries. Meta-analyses did not show evidence of a difference in the incidence of invasive infection (typical risk ratio (RR) 1.13, 95% confidence interval (CI) 0.97 to 1.31; low quality evidence) or mortality (typical RR 0.87, 95% CI 0.75 to 1.03; low quality evidence).Eleven trials (1184 infants) assessed the effect of plant or vegetable oils. Nine of these trials were undertaken in low- or middle-income countries and all were based in health-care facilities rather than home or community settings. Meta-analyses did not show evidence of a difference in the incidence of invasive infection (typical RR 0.71, 95% CI 0.51 to 1.01; low quality evidence) or mortality (typical RR 0.94, 95% CI 0.81 to 1.08; moderate quality evidence). Infants massaged with vegetable oil had a higher rate of weight gain (about 2.55 g/kg/day; 95% CI 1.76 to 3.34), linear growth (about 1.22 mm/week; 95% CI 1.01 to 1.44), and head growth (about 0.45 mm/week; 95% CI 0.19 to 0.70). These meta-analyses contained substantial heterogeneity.
AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: The available data do not provide evidence that the use of emollient therapy prevents invasive infection or death in preterm infants in high-, middle- or low-income settings. Some evidence of an effect of topical vegetable oils on neonatal growth exists but this should be interpreted with caution because lack of blinding may have introduced caregiver or assessment biases. Since these interventions are low cost, readily accessible, and generally acceptable, further randomised controlled trials, particularly in both community- and health care facility-based settings in low-income countries, may be justified.
发育不成熟的表皮屏障遭到破坏可能会使微生物得以侵入,从而导致早产儿发生侵袭性感染。局部润肤剂可能会改善皮肤完整性和屏障功能,进而预防侵袭性感染,而侵袭性感染是早产儿死亡和发病的主要原因。
评估局部应用润肤剂(软膏、乳膏或油剂)对早产儿侵袭性感染发病率、其他发病率及死亡率的影响。
我们采用Cochrane新生儿综述小组的标准检索策略,检索了Cochrane对照试验中心注册库(CENTRAL 2015年第7期)、通过PubMed检索的MEDLINE(1966年至2015年8月)、EMBASE(1980年至2015年8月)以及CINAHL(1982年至2015年8月)。我们还检索了临床试验数据库、会议论文集、以往的综述以及检索到的文章的参考文献列表,以查找随机对照试验和半随机试验。
评估预防性局部应用润肤剂(软膏、乳膏或油剂)对早产儿侵袭性感染发病率、死亡率、其他发病率以及生长发育影响的随机或半随机对照试验。
两位综述作者独立评估试验的合格性和偏倚风险,并进行数据提取。我们分析了各个试验中的治疗效果,并报告了二分数据的风险比和风险差以及连续数据的均值差,并给出各自的95%置信区间。我们在Meta分析中采用固定效应模型,并在亚组分析中探讨异质性的潜在原因。
我们确定了18篇符合条件的原始出版物(21份试验报告)。共有3089名婴儿参与了这些试验。偏倚风险各不相同,一半的试验在分配隐藏方法上不明确,所有试验中护理人员或研究者均未设盲,这是主要的潜在偏倚来源。八项试验(2086名婴儿)研究了局部软膏或乳膏的效果。大多数参与者是在高收入国家的医疗机构接受护理的极早产儿。Meta分析未显示侵袭性感染发病率(典型风险比(RR)1.13,95%置信区间(CI)0.97至1.31;低质量证据)或死亡率(典型RR 0.87,95%CI 0.75至1.03;低质量证据)存在差异的证据。十一项试验(共1184名婴儿)评估了植物油的效果。其中九项试验在低收入或中等收入国家进行,且均在医疗机构而非家庭或社区环境中开展研究。Meta分析未显示侵袭性感染发病率(典型RR 0.71,95%CI 0.51至1.01;低质量证据)或死亡率(典型RR 0.94,95%CI 0.81至1.08;中等质量证据)存在差异的证据。接受植物油按摩的婴儿体重增加率更高(约2.55克/千克/天;95%CI 1.76至3.34)、线性生长更快(约1.22毫米/周;95%CI 1.01至1.44)、头围生长更快(约0.45毫米/周;95%CI 0.19至0.70)。这些Meta分析存在显著的异质性。
现有数据未提供证据表明在高收入、中等收入或低收入环境中,使用润肤剂疗法可预防早产儿的侵袭性感染或死亡。有一些证据表明局部植物油对新生儿生长有影响,但应谨慎解读,因为未设盲可能导致护理人员或评估偏倚。由于这些干预措施成本低、易于获得且普遍可接受,因此开展进一步的随机对照试验可能是合理的,尤其是在低收入国家的社区和医疗机构环境中。