Every-Palmer Susanna, Newton-Howes Giles, Clarke Mike J
Wellington School of Medicine, University of Otago, Wellington, New Zealand.
Te Korowai Whariki, Capital and Coast District Health Board, Papatuanuku, Ratonga Rua-o-Porirua, Raiha Street, Porirua, New Zealand.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2017 Jan 24;1(1):CD011128. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD011128.pub2.
Antipsychotic-related constipation is a common and serious adverse effect, especially for people taking clozapine. Clozapine has been shown to impede gastrointestinal motility, leading to constipation, and has been reported in up to 60% of patients receiving clozapine. In rare cases, complications can be fatal. Appropriate laxatives should be prescribed to treat constipation in people taking antipsychotics, but there is a lack of guidance on the comparative effectiveness and harms of different agents in this population. An understanding of the effectiveness and safety of treatment for antipsychotic-related constipation is important for clinicians and patients alike.
To evaluate the effectiveness and safety of pharmacologic treatment (versus placebo or compared against another treatment) for antipsychotic-related constipation (defined as constipated patients of any age, who are treated with antipsychotics, regardless of dose, in which constipation is considered to be an antipsychotic-related side effect).
We searched the Cochrane Schizophrenia Group's Trials Register (15 June 2015), which is based on regular searches of MEDLINE, Embase, CINAHL, BIOSIS, AMED, PubMed, PsycINFO, and registries of clinical trials, grey literature, and conference proceedings. There are no language, date, document type, or publication status limitations for inclusion of records in this register. We also handsearched bibliographies and contacted relevant authors for additional information.
We included all published and unpublished randomised controlled trials (RCTs) investigating the efficacy of pharmacological treatments in patients with antipsychotic-related constipation. Pharmacological treatments included laxatives and other medicines that could reasonably be used to combat constipation in this population (e.g. anticholinergic agents, like bethanecol).
Two review authors independently extracted data from all included studies and assessed trials for risk of bias. A third author reviewed 20% of trials. We analysed dichotomous data using relative risks (RR) and the 95% confidence intervals (CI). We assessed risk of bias for included studies and used GRADE to create a 'Summary of findings' table. We discussed any disagreement, documented decisions, and attempted to contact study authors when necessary.
We identified two relevant Chinese studies (N = 480) that contributed data to this review. Both studies were over ten years old and poorly reported, lacking descriptions of contemporary CONSORT reporting prerequisites, such as sequence generation, allocation concealment, blinding, participant flow, how the sample size was determined, or how outcomes were measured. The studies also did not report trial registration, pre-specified protocols, consent processes, ethical review, or funding source. We were unsuccessful in making contact with the authors to clarify the missing details. We classified both studies as having an overall high risk of bias.One study compared glycerol suppository with the traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) approaches of tuina massage and acupuncture. Compared to tuina massage, glycerol laxative was less effective in relieving constipation at both two days after treatment (1 RCT; N = 120; RR 2.88, 95% CI 1.89 to 4.39; very low-quality evidence), and three days (1 RCT; N = 120; RR 4.80, CI 1.96 to 11.74, very low-quality evidence). Favourable results were also seen for acupuncture at two days (1 RCT; N = 120; RR 3.50; 95% CI 2.18 to 5.62; very low-quality evidence), and at three days (1 RCT; N = 120; RR 8.00, 95% CI 2.54 to 25.16; very low-quality evidence).The other study compared mannitol, an osmotic laxative, with rhubarb soda or phenolphthalein. Mannitol was more effective than rhubarb soda or phenolphthalein in trelieving constipation within 24 hours of treatment (1 RCT; N = 240; RR 0.07; 95% CI 0.02 to 0.27, very low-quality evidence).No data were reported for our other important outcomes: need for rescue medication, bowel obstruction (a complication of antipsychotic-related constipation), quality of life, adverse events, leaving the study early, and economic costs.
AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: We had hoped to find clinically useful evidence appraising the relative merits of the interventions routinely used to manage antipsychotic-related constipation, a common and potentially serious adverse effect of the use of these drugs. The results were disappointing. There were no data comparing the common pharmacological interventions for constipation, such as lactulose, polyethylene glycol, stool softeners, lubricant laxatives, or of novel treatments such as linaclotide. Data available were very poor quality and the trials had a high risk of bias. Data from these biased studies suggested that mannitol, an osmotic laxative, was more effective than rhubarb soda and phenolphthalein in relieving constipation, and a two-week course of glycerol suppositories was less effective than the TCM approaches of tuina massage and acupuncture.Overall, there is insufficient trial-based evidence to assess the effectiveness and safety of pharmacological interventions for treating antipsychotic-related constipation, due to limited, poor quality data (few studies with high risk of bias and no meta-analyses). The methodological limitations in the included studies were obvious, and any conclusions based on their results should be made with caution. Methodologically rigorous RCTs evaluating interventions for treating antipsychotic-related constipation are needed.
抗精神病药物所致便秘是一种常见且严重的不良反应,尤其是对于服用氯氮平的患者。已证实氯氮平会妨碍胃肠蠕动,导致便秘,据报道,接受氯氮平治疗的患者中高达60%会出现这种情况。在极少数情况下,并发症可能是致命的。对于服用抗精神病药物的便秘患者,应开具适当的泻药进行治疗,但目前缺乏关于不同药物在该人群中的相对疗效和危害的指导。了解抗精神病药物所致便秘的治疗效果和安全性对临床医生和患者都很重要。
评估药物治疗(与安慰剂相比或与另一种治疗方法相比)对抗精神病药物所致便秘(定义为任何年龄、正在接受抗精神病药物治疗的便秘患者,无论剂量如何,其中便秘被认为是抗精神病药物相关的副作用)的有效性和安全性。
我们检索了Cochrane精神分裂症研究组的试验注册库(2015年6月15日),该注册库基于定期检索MEDLINE、Embase、CINAHL、BIOSIS、AMED、PubMed、PsycINFO以及临床试验注册库、灰色文献和会议论文集。该注册库纳入记录时没有语言、日期、文献类型或出版状态的限制。我们还手工检索了参考文献,并联系了相关作者以获取更多信息。
我们纳入了所有已发表和未发表的随机对照试验(RCT),这些试验研究了药物治疗在抗精神病药物所致便秘患者中的疗效。药物治疗包括泻药和其他可合理用于治疗该人群便秘的药物(如抗胆碱能药物,如氨甲酰甲胆碱)。
两位综述作者独立从所有纳入研究中提取数据,并评估试验的偏倚风险。第三位作者对20%的试验进行了审核。我们使用相对风险(RR)和95%置信区间(CI)分析二分数据。我们评估了纳入研究的偏倚风险,并使用GRADE创建了一个“结果总结”表。我们讨论了任何分歧,记录了决策,并在必要时试图联系研究作者。
我们确定了两项相关的中国研究(N = 480),这些研究为本次综述提供了数据。两项研究都有十多年的历史,报告质量很差,缺乏对当代CONSORT报告必备条件的描述,如序列生成、分配隐藏、盲法、受试者流程、样本量如何确定或结果如何测量。这些研究也没有报告试验注册、预先指定的方案、同意过程、伦理审查或资金来源。我们未能联系到作者以澄清缺失的细节。我们将这两项研究都归类为总体偏倚风险高。一项研究比较了甘油栓与推拿按摩及针灸等中医方法。与推拿按摩相比,甘油泻药在治疗后两天(1项RCT;N = 120;RR 2.88,95% CI 1.89至4.39;极低质量证据)和三天(1项RCT;N = 120;RR 4.80,CI 1.96至11.74,极低质量证据)缓解便秘方面效果较差。针灸在两天(1项RCT;N = 120;RR 3.50;95% CI 2.18至5.62;极低质量证据)和三天(1项RCT;N = 120;RR 8.00,95% CI 2.54至25.16;极低质量证据)也显示出较好的效果。另一项研究比较了渗透性泻药甘露醇与大黄苏打或酚酞。甘露醇在治疗后24小时内缓解便秘方面比大黄苏打或酚酞更有效(1项RCT;N = 240;RR 0.07;95% CI 0.02至0.27,极低质量证据)。我们的其他重要结局未报告数据:急救药物需求、肠梗阻(抗精神病药物所致便秘的一种并发症)、生活质量、不良事件、提前退出研究以及经济成本。
我们本希望找到评估常规用于治疗抗精神病药物所致便秘(这些药物常见且可能严重的不良反应)的干预措施相对优点的临床有用证据。结果令人失望。没有数据比较便秘的常见药物干预措施,如乳果糖、聚乙二醇、大便软化剂以及润滑性泻药,也没有关于新型治疗方法如利那洛肽的数据。现有数据质量非常差,试验存在高偏倚风险。这些有偏倚研究的数据表明,渗透性泻药甘露醇在缓解便秘方面比大黄苏打和酚酞更有效,而两周疗程的甘油栓比推拿按摩及针灸等中医方法效果差。总体而言,由于数据有限且质量差(很少有研究偏倚风险高且没有荟萃分析),缺乏基于试验的证据来评估药物干预治疗抗精神病药物所致便秘的有效性和安全性。纳入研究中的方法学局限性很明显,基于其结果得出的任何结论都应谨慎。需要进行方法学严谨的RCT来评估治疗抗精神病药物所致便秘的干预措施。