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口服阿司匹林治疗下肢静脉溃疡。

Oral aspirin for treating venous leg ulcers.

作者信息

de Oliveira Carvalho Paulo Eduardo, Magolbo Natiara G, De Aquino Rebeca F, Weller Carolina D

机构信息

Evidence Based Health Actions Department and Thoracic Surgery Department, Marilia Medical School, Avenida Monte Carmelo, 800, Bairro Fragata, Marilia, Sao Paulo, Brazil, 17519-030.

出版信息

Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2016 Feb 18;2(2):CD009432. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD009432.pub2.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Venous leg ulcers (VLUs) or varicose ulcers are the final stage of chronic venous insufficiency (CVI), and are the most common type of leg ulcer. The development of VLUs on ankles and lower legs can occur spontaneously or after minor trauma. The ulcers are often painful and exudative, healing is often protracted and recurrence is common. This cycle of healing and recurrence has a considerable impact on the health and quality of life of individuals, and healthcare and socioeconomic costs. VLUs are a common and costly problem worldwide; prevalence is estimated to be between 1.65% to 1.74% in the western world and is more common in adults aged 65 years and older. The main treatment for a VLU is a firm compression bandage. Compression assists by reducing venous hypertension, enhancing venous return and reducing peripheral oedema. However, studies show that it only has moderate effects on healing, with up to 50% of VLUs unhealed after two years of compression. Non-adherence may be the principal cause of these poor results, but presence of inflammation in people with CVI may be another factor, so a treatment that suppresses inflammation (healing ulcers more quickly) and reduces the frequency of ulcer recurrence (thereby prolonging time between recurrent episodes) would be an invaluable intervention to complement compression treatments. Oral aspirin may have a significant impact on VLU clinical practice worldwide. Evidence for the effectiveness of aspirin on ulcer healing and recurrence in high quality RCTs is currently lacking.

OBJECTIVES

To assess the benefits and harms of oral aspirin on the healing and recurrence of venous leg ulcers.

SEARCH METHODS

In May 2015 we searched: The Cochrane Wounds Specialised Register; The Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (CENTRAL) (The Cochrane Library); Ovid MEDLINE; Ovid MEDLINE (In-Process & Other Non-Indexed Citations); Ovid EMBASE and EBSCO CINAHL. Additional searches were made in trial registers and reference lists of relevant publications for published or ongoing trials. There were no language or publication date restrictions.

SELECTION CRITERIA

We included randomised controlled trials (RCTs) that compared oral aspirin with placebo or no drug intervention (in the presence or absence of compression therapy) for treating people with venous leg ulcers. Our main outcomes were time to complete ulcer healing, rate of change in the area of the ulcer, proportion of ulcers healed in the trial period, major bleeding, pain, mortality, adverse events and ulcer recurrence (time for recurrence and proportion of recurrence).

DATA COLLECTION AND ANALYSIS

Two review authors independently selected studies for inclusion, extracted data, assessed the risk of bias of each included trial and assessed overall quality of evidence for the main outcomes in the 'Summary of findings' table.

MAIN RESULTS

The electronic search located 62 studies. We included two RCTs of oral aspirin (300 mg/daily) given in addition to compression compared with compression and placebo, or compression alone. To date, the impact of aspirin on VLUs has been examined by only two randomised clinical trials, both with a small number of participants. The first RCT was conducted in the United Kingdom (n=20) and reported that daily administration of aspirin (300mg) in addition to compression bandages increased both the rate of healing, and the number of participants healed when compared to placebo in addition to compression bandaging over a four month period. Thirty-eight per cent of the participants given aspirin reported complete healing compared with 0% in the placebo group . Improvement (assessed by reduction in wound size) occurred in 52% of the participants taking aspirin compared with 26% in those taking placebo). The study identified potential benefits of taking aspirin as an adjunct to compression but the sample size was small, and neither the mechanism by which aspirin improved healing nor its effects on recurrence were investigated.In 2012 an RCT in Spain (n=51) compared daily administration of aspirin (300mg) in addition to compression bandages with compression alone over a five month period. There was little difference in complete healing rates between groups (21/28 aspirin and 17/23 compression bandages alone) but the average time to healing was shorter (12 weeks in the treated group vs 22 weeks in the compression only group) and the average time for recurrence was longer in the aspirin group (39 days: [SD 6.0] compared with 16.3 days [SD 7.5] in the compression only group). Although this trial provides some limited data about the potential use of aspirin therapy, the sample size (only 20 patients) was too small for us to draw meaningful conclusions. In addition, patients were only followed up for 4 months and no information on placebo was reported.

AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: Low quality evidence from two trials indicate that there is currently insufficient evidence for us to draw definitive conclusions about the benefits and harms of oral aspirin on the healing and recurrence of venous leg ulcers. We downgraded the evidence to low quality due to potential selection bias and imprecision due to the small sample size. The small number of participants may have a hidden real benefit, or an increase in harm. Due to the lack of reliable evidence, we are unable to draw conclusions about the benefits and harms of oral daily aspirin as an adjunct to compression in VLU healing or recurrence. Further high quality studies are needed in this area.

摘要

背景

下肢静脉溃疡(VLUs)或静脉曲张性溃疡是慢性静脉功能不全(CVI)的终末阶段,是最常见的腿部溃疡类型。脚踝和小腿部位的VLUs可自发出现,也可在轻微创伤后发生。溃疡常伴有疼痛和渗出,愈合过程往往迁延不愈且复发常见。这种愈合和复发的循环对个体的健康和生活质量以及医疗保健和社会经济成本都有相当大的影响。VLUs在全球范围内都是一个常见且代价高昂的问题;据估计,在西方世界,其患病率在1.65%至1.74%之间,在65岁及以上的成年人中更为常见。VLUs的主要治疗方法是使用坚固的加压绷带。加压通过降低静脉高压、增强静脉回流和减轻外周水肿来发挥作用。然而,研究表明,它对愈合的效果仅为中等,在加压治疗两年后,高达50%的VLUs仍未愈合。不依从可能是导致这些不良结果的主要原因,但CVI患者存在的炎症可能是另一个因素,因此一种能够抑制炎症(更快治愈溃疡)并减少溃疡复发频率(从而延长复发间隔时间)的治疗方法将是补充加压治疗的一项非常有价值的干预措施。口服阿司匹林可能会对全球范围内的VLUs临床实践产生重大影响。目前缺乏高质量随机对照试验(RCT)来证明阿司匹林对溃疡愈合和复发有效性的证据。

目的

评估口服阿司匹林对下肢静脉溃疡愈合和复发的益处和危害。

检索方法

2015年5月,我们检索了:Cochrane伤口专业注册库;Cochrane对照试验中央注册库(CENTRAL)(Cochrane图书馆);Ovid MEDLINE;Ovid MEDLINE(在研及其他非索引引文);Ovid EMBASE和EBSCO CINAHL。还在试验注册库以及相关已发表或正在进行试验的出版物的参考文献列表中进行了额外检索。没有语言或出版日期限制。

选择标准

我们纳入了将口服阿司匹林与安慰剂或无药物干预(无论是否存在加压治疗)进行比较,用于治疗下肢静脉溃疡患者的随机对照试验(RCT)。我们的主要结局指标包括溃疡完全愈合的时间、溃疡面积的变化率、试验期间溃疡愈合的比例、大出血、疼痛、死亡率、不良事件以及溃疡复发(复发时间和复发比例)。

数据收集与分析

两位综述作者独立选择纳入研究、提取数据、评估每个纳入试验的偏倚风险,并在“结果总结”表中评估主要结局指标的总体证据质量。

主要结果

电子检索共找到62项研究。我们纳入了两项口服阿司匹林(300毫克/每日)联合加压治疗与加压治疗加安慰剂或单纯加压治疗比较的RCT。迄今为止,仅通过两项随机临床试验研究了阿司匹林对VLUs的影响,且两项试验的参与者数量均较少。第一项RCT在英国进行(n = 20),报告称在四个月的时间里,与单纯加压绷带加安慰剂相比,在加压绷带基础上每日服用阿司匹林(300毫克)可提高愈合率,且愈合的参与者数量更多。服用阿司匹林的参与者中有38%报告溃疡完全愈合,而安慰剂组为0%。服用阿司匹林的参与者中有52%伤口大小有所改善(通过伤口大小减小来评估),而服用安慰剂的参与者中这一比例为26%。该研究确定了服用阿司匹林作为加压治疗辅助手段的潜在益处,但样本量较小,且未研究阿司匹林促进愈合的机制及其对复发的影响。2012年在西班牙进行的一项RCT(n = 51)比较了在五个月的时间里,加压绷带联合每日服用阿司匹林(300毫克)与单纯加压治疗的效果。两组的完全愈合率差异不大(阿司匹林组21/28例与单纯加压绷带组17/23例),但治疗组的平均愈合时间更短(治疗组为12周,单纯加压组为22周),且阿司匹林组的平均复发时间更长(39天:[标准差6.0],而单纯加压组为16.3天[标准差7.5])。尽管该试验提供了一些关于阿司匹林治疗潜在用途的有限数据,但样本量(仅20例患者)太小,我们无法得出有意义的结论。此外患者仅随访了4个月,且未报告关于安慰剂的信息。

作者结论

两项试验的低质量证据表明,目前我们没有足够的证据就口服阿司匹林对下肢静脉溃疡愈合和复发的益处和危害得出明确结论。由于可能存在的选择偏倚以及样本量小导致的不精确性,我们将证据降级为低质量。参与者数量少可能隐藏着真正的益处,也可能增加危害。由于缺乏可靠证据,我们无法就口服每日阿司匹林作为加压治疗辅助手段对VLUs愈合或复发的益处和危害得出结论。该领域需要进一步的高质量研究。

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