Marques Raquel E, Duarte Gonçalo S, Rodrigues Filipe B, Castelão Mafalda, Ferreira Joaquim, Sampaio Cristina, Moore A Peter, Costa João
Laboratório de Farmacologia Clínica e Terapêutica, Faculdade de Medicina de Lisboa, Av. Professor Egas Moniz, Lisboa, Portugal, 1649-028.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2016 May 13;2016(5):CD004315. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD004315.pub3.
This is an update of a Cochrane review first published in 2004, and previously updated in 2009 (no change in conclusions). Cervical dystonia is a frequent and disabling disorder characterised by painful involuntary head posturing. Botulinum toxin type A (BtA) is usually considered the first line therapy for this condition, although botulinum toxin type B (BtB) is an alternative option.
To compare the efficacy, safety and tolerability of botulinum toxin type B (BtB) versus placebo in people with cervical dystonia.
We identified studies for inclusion in the review using the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (CENTRAL), MEDLINE, EMBASE, reference lists of articles and conference proceedings, last run in October 2015. We ran the search from 1977 to 2015. The search was unrestricted by language.
Double-blind, parallel, randomised, placebo-controlled trials (RCTs) of BtB versus placebo in adults with cervical dystonia.
Two independent authors assessed records, selected included studies, extracted data using a paper pro forma and evaluated the risk of bias. We resolved disagreements by consensus or by consulting a third author. We performed one meta-analysis for the comparison BtB versus placebo. We used random-effects models when there was heterogeneity and fixed-effect models when there was no heterogeneity. In addition, we performed pre-specified subgroup analyses according to BtB doses and BtA previous clinical responsiveness. The primary efficacy outcome was overall improvement on any validated symptomatic rating scale. The primary safety outcome was the number of participants with any adverse event.
We included four RCTs of moderate overall methodological quality, including 441 participants with cervical dystonia. Three studies excluded participants known to have poorer response to Bt treatment, therefore including an enriched population with a higher probability of benefiting from Bt treatment. None of the trials were independently funded. All RCTs evaluated the effect of a single Bt treatment session using doses between 2500 U and 10,000 U. BtB was associated with an improvement of 14.7% (95% CI 9.8% to 19.5) in the patients' baseline clinical status as assessed by investigators, with reduction of 6.8 points in the Toronto Western Spasmodic Torticollis Rating Scale (TWSTRS-total score) at week 4 after injection (95% CI 4.54 to 9.01). Mean difference (MD) in TWSTRS-pain score at week 4 was 2.20 (95% CI 1.25 to 3.15). Overall, both participants and clinicians reported an improvement of subjective clinical status. There were no differences between groups in the withdrawals rate due to adverse events or in the proportion of participants with adverse events. However, BtB-treated patients had a 7.65 (95% CI 2.75 to 21.32) and a 6.78 (95% CI 2.42 to 19.05) increased risk of treatment-related dry mouth and dysphagia, respectively. Statistical heterogeneity between studies was low to moderate for most outcomes. All tested dosages were efficacious against placebo without clear-cut evidence of a dose-response gradient. However, duration of effect (time until return to baseline TWSTRS-total score) and risk of dry mouth and dysphagia were greater in the subgroup of participants treated with higher BtB doses. Subgroup analysis showed a higher improvement with BtB among BtA-non-responsive participants, although there were no differences in the effect size between the BtA-responsive and non-responsive subgroups.
AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: A single BtB-treatment session is associated with a significant and clinically relevant reduction of cervical dystonia impairment including severity, disability and pain, and is well tolerated, when compared with placebo. However, BtB-treated patients are at an increased risk of dry mouth and dysphagia. There are no data from RCTs evaluating the effectiveness and safety of repeated BtB injection cycles. There are no RCT data to allow us to draw definitive conclusions on the optimal treatment intervals and doses, usefulness of guidance techniques for injection, and impact on quality of life.
这是Cochrane系统评价的更新版本,该评价首次发表于2004年,此前于2009年进行过更新(结论无变化)。颈部肌张力障碍是一种常见的致残性疾病,其特征为头部疼痛性不自主姿势。A型肉毒毒素(BtA)通常被认为是这种疾病的一线治疗方法,尽管B型肉毒毒素(BtB)也是一种替代选择。
比较B型肉毒毒素(BtB)与安慰剂对颈部肌张力障碍患者的疗效、安全性和耐受性。
我们使用Cochrane对照试验中央注册库(CENTRAL)、MEDLINE、EMBASE、文章参考文献列表和会议论文集识别纳入该评价的研究,检索最后一次运行于2015年10月。我们检索了1977年至2015年的文献。检索不受语言限制。
关于BtB与安慰剂对比治疗成年颈部肌张力障碍患者的双盲、平行、随机、安慰剂对照试验(RCT)。
两名独立作者评估记录、选择纳入研究、使用纸质表格提取数据并评估偏倚风险。我们通过达成共识或咨询第三位作者解决分歧。我们对BtB与安慰剂的比较进行了一项Meta分析。存在异质性时我们使用随机效应模型,不存在异质性时使用固定效应模型。此外,我们根据BtB剂量和BtA既往临床反应性进行了预先设定的亚组分析。主要疗效结局是在任何经过验证的症状评分量表上的总体改善情况。主要安全性结局是发生任何不良事件的参与者数量。
我们纳入了四项总体方法学质量中等的RCT,包括441例颈部肌张力障碍患者。三项研究排除了已知对Bt治疗反应较差的参与者,因此纳入了一个更有可能从Bt治疗中获益的富集人群。没有一项试验是独立资助的。所有RCT均评估了单次Bt治疗疗程的效果,使用剂量在2500 U至10,000 U之间。根据研究者评估,BtB与患者基线临床状态改善14.7%(95%CI 9.8%至19.5%)相关,注射后第4周多伦多西部痉挛性斜颈评分量表(TWSTRS总分)降低6.8分(95%CI 4.54至9.01)。第4周TWSTRS疼痛评分的平均差(MD)为2.20(95%CI 1.25至3.15)。总体而言,参与者和临床医生均报告主观临床状态有所改善。两组因不良事件导致的退出率或发生不良事件的参与者比例没有差异。然而,接受BtB治疗的患者出现与治疗相关的口干和吞咽困难的风险分别增加7.65(95%CI 2.75至21.32)和6.78(95%CI 2.42至19.05)。大多数结局的研究间统计异质性为低到中等。所有测试剂量均对安慰剂有效,没有明确的剂量反应梯度证据。然而,在接受较高BtB剂量治疗的参与者亚组中,作用持续时间(直至TWSTRS总分恢复到基线的时间)以及口干和吞咽困难的风险更大。亚组分析显示,在对BtA无反应的参与者中BtB改善更明显,尽管在对BtA有反应和无反应的亚组之间效应大小没有差异。
与安慰剂相比,单次BtB治疗疗程与颈部肌张力障碍损害(包括严重程度、残疾和疼痛)的显著且具有临床意义的降低相关,并且耐受性良好。然而,接受BtB治疗的患者出现口干和吞咽困难的风险增加。没有RCT数据评估重复BtB注射周期的有效性和安全性。没有RCT数据使我们能够就最佳治疗间隔和剂量、注射引导技术的有用性以及对生活质量的影响得出明确结论。