Jones Katherine, Pitceathly Robert D S, Rose Michael R, McGowan Susan, Hill Marguerite, Badrising Umesh A, Hughes Tom
Department of Neurology, King's College Hospital NHS Foundation Trust, 9th floor Ruskin Wing, Denmark Hill, London, UK, SE5 9RS.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2016 Feb 9;2(2):CD004303. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD004303.pub4.
Normal swallowing function is divided into oral, pharyngeal, and oesophageal phases. The anatomy and physiology of the oral cavity facilitates an oral preparatory phase of swallowing, in which food and liquid are pushed towards the pharynx by the tongue. During pharyngeal and oesophageal phases of swallowing, food and liquid are moved from the pharynx to the stomach via the oesophagus. Our understanding of swallowing function in health and disease has informed our understanding of how muscle weakness can disrupt swallowing in people with muscle disease. As a common complication of long-term, progressive muscle disease, there is a clear need to evaluate the current interventions for managing swallowing difficulties (dysphagia). This is an update of a review first published in 2004.
To assess the effects of interventions for dysphagia in people with long-term, progressive muscle disease.
On 11 January 2016, we searched the Cochrane Neuromuscular Specialised Register, the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (CENTRAL), MEDLINE, EMBASE, AMED, LILACS, and CINAHL. We checked references in the identified trials for additional randomised and quasi-randomised controlled trials. We also searched ClinicalTrials.gov and the World Health Organization International Clinical Trials Registry Platform on 12 January 2016 for ongoing or completed but unpublished clinical trials.
We included randomised and quasi-randomised controlled trials that assessed the effect of interventions for managing dysphagia in adults and children with long-term, progressive muscle disease, compared to other interventions, placebo, no intervention, or standard care. Quasi-randomised controlled trials are trials that used a quasi-random method of allocation, such as date of birth, alternation, or case record number. Review authors previously excluded trials involving people with muscle conditions of a known inflammatory or toxic aetiology. In this review update, we decided to include trials of people with sporadic inclusion body myositis (IBM) on the basis that it presents as a long-term, progressive muscle disease with uncertain degenerative and inflammatory aetiology and is typically refractory to treatment.
We applied standard Cochrane methodological procedures.
There were no randomised controlled trials (RCTs) that reported results in terms of the review's primary outcome of interest, weight gain or maintenance. However, we identified one RCT that assessed the effect of intravenous immunoglobulin on swallowing function in people with IBM. The trial authors did not specify the number of study participants who had dysphagia. There was also incomplete reporting of findings from videofluoroscopic investigations, which was one of the review's secondary outcome measures. The study did report reductions in the time taken to swallow, as measured using ultrasound. No serious adverse events occurred during the study, although data for the follow-up period were lacking. It was also unclear whether the non-serious adverse events reported occurred in the treatment group or the placebo group. We assessed this study as having a high risk of bias and uncertain confidence intervals for the review outcomes, which limited the overall quality of the evidence. Using GRADE criteria, we downgraded the quality of the evidence from this RCT to 'low' for efficacy in treating dysphagia, due to limitations in study design and implementation, and indirectness in terms of the population and outcome measures. Similarly, we assessed the quality of the evidence for adverse events as 'low'. From our search for RCTs, we identified two other non-randomised studies, which reported the effects of long-term intravenous immunoglobulin therapy in adults with IBM and lip-strengthening exercises in children with myotonic dystrophy type 1. Headaches affected two participants treated with long-term intravenous immunoglobulin therapy, who received a tailored dose reduction; there were no adverse events associated with lip-strengthening exercises. Both non-randomised studies identified improved outcomes for some participants following the intervention, but neither study specified the number of participants with dysphagia or demonstrated any group-level treatment effect for swallowing function using the outcomes prespecified in this review.
AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: There is insufficient and low-quality RCT evidence to determine the effect of interventions for dysphagia in long-term, progressive muscle disease. Clinically relevant effects of intravenous immunoglobulin for dysphagia in inclusion body myositis can neither be confirmed or excluded using the evidence presented in this review. Standardised, validated, and reliable outcome measures are needed to assess dysphagia and any possible treatment effect. Clinically meaningful outcomes for dysphagia may require a shift in focus from measures of impairment to disability associated with oral feeding difficulties.
正常吞咽功能分为口腔期、咽期和食管期。口腔的解剖结构和生理功能有助于吞咽的口腔准备期,在此期间,食物和液体由舌头推向咽部。在吞咽的咽期和食管期,食物和液体通过食管从咽部移至胃部。我们对健康和疾病状态下吞咽功能的了解,为我们理解肌肉无力如何干扰肌肉疾病患者的吞咽提供了依据。作为长期、进行性肌肉疾病的常见并发症,显然有必要评估当前用于管理吞咽困难(吞咽障碍)的干预措施。这是对2004年首次发表的一篇综述的更新。
评估干预措施对长期、进行性肌肉疾病患者吞咽障碍的影响。
2016年1月11日,我们检索了Cochrane神经肌肉专业注册库、Cochrane对照试验中央注册库(CENTRAL)、MEDLINE、EMBASE、AMED、LILACS和CINAHL。我们检查了已识别试验中的参考文献,以查找其他随机和半随机对照试验。我们还于2016年1月12日在ClinicalTrials.gov和世界卫生组织国际临床试验注册平台上检索了正在进行或已完成但未发表的临床试验。
我们纳入了随机和半随机对照试验,这些试验评估了与其他干预措施、安慰剂、无干预措施或标准护理相比,干预措施对长期、进行性肌肉疾病成人和儿童吞咽障碍管理的效果。半随机对照试验是指使用半随机分配方法的试验,如出生日期、交替分组或病例记录编号。综述作者之前排除了涉及已知炎症或毒性病因的肌肉疾病患者的试验。在本次综述更新中,我们决定纳入散发性包涵体肌炎(IBM)患者的试验,因为它表现为一种长期、进行性肌肉疾病,其退行性和炎症病因不明,且通常对治疗难治。
我们应用了标准的Cochrane方法学程序。
没有随机对照试验(RCT)报告本综述感兴趣的主要结局指标,即体重增加或维持情况的结果。然而,我们识别出一项RCT,该试验评估了静脉注射免疫球蛋白对IBM患者吞咽功能的影响。试验作者未明确报告有吞咽障碍的研究参与者数量。此外,视频荧光透视检查结果的报告也不完整,而这是本综述的次要结局指标之一。该研究确实报告了使用超声测量的吞咽时间缩短。研究期间未发生严重不良事件,不过缺乏随访期数据。也不清楚所报告的非严重不良事件是发生在治疗组还是安慰剂组。我们评估该研究存在高偏倚风险,且综述结局的置信区间不确定,这限制了证据的整体质量。根据GRADE标准,由于研究设计和实施存在局限性,以及在人群和结局指标方面的间接性,我们将该RCT治疗吞咽障碍疗效的证据质量降至“低”。同样,我们将不良事件证据的质量评估为“低”。在我们对RCT的检索中,我们识别出另外两项非随机研究,它们报告了长期静脉注射免疫球蛋白疗法对成人IBM患者的影响以及对1型强直性肌营养不良儿童进行唇部强化训练的效果。两名接受长期静脉注射免疫球蛋白治疗的参与者出现头痛,他们接受了针对性的剂量减少;唇部强化训练未出现不良事件。两项非随机研究均发现部分参与者在干预后结局有所改善,但两项研究均未明确有吞咽障碍的参与者数量,也未使用本综述预先设定的结局指标证明对吞咽功能有任何组间治疗效果。
没有足够的高质量RCT证据来确定干预措施对长期、进行性肌肉疾病患者吞咽障碍的影响。根据本综述所提供的证据,既无法证实也无法排除静脉注射免疫球蛋白对包涵体肌炎患者吞咽障碍的临床相关效果。需要标准化、经过验证且可靠的结局指标来评估吞咽障碍及任何可能的治疗效果。吞咽障碍具有临床意义的结局可能需要将重点从损伤测量指标转向与经口喂养困难相关的残疾指标。