Burry Lisa, Hutton Brian, Williamson David R, Mehta Sangeeta, Adhikari Neill Kj, Cheng Wei, Ely E Wesley, Egerod Ingrid, Fergusson Dean A, Rose Louise
Department of Pharmacy, Mount Sinai Hospital, Leslie Dan Faculty of Pharmacy, University of Toronto, 600 University Avenue, Room 18-377, Toronto, ON, Canada, M5G 1X5.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2019 Sep 3;9(9):CD011749. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD011749.pub2.
Although delirium is typically an acute reversible cognitive impairment, its presence is associated with devastating impact on both short-term and long-term outcomes for critically ill patients. Advances in our understanding of the negative impact of delirium on patient outcomes have prompted trials evaluating multiple pharmacological interventions. However, considerable uncertainty surrounds the relative benefits and safety of available pharmacological interventions for this population.
Primary objective1. To assess the effects of pharmacological interventions for treatment of delirium on duration of delirium in critically ill adults with confirmed or documented high risk of deliriumSecondary objectivesTo assess the following:1. effects of pharmacological interventions on delirium-free and coma-free days; days with coma; delirium relapse; duration of mechanical ventilation; intensive care unit (ICU) and hospital length of stay; mortality; and long-term outcomes (e.g. cognitive; discharge disposition; health-related quality of life); and2. the safety of such treatments for critically ill adult patients.
We searched the following databases from their inception date to 21 March 2019: Ovid MEDLINE®, Ovid MEDLINE® In-Process & Other Non-Indexed Citations, Embase Classic+Embase, and PsycINFO using the Ovid platform. We also searched the Cochrane Library on Wiley, the International Prospective Register of Systematic Reviews (PROSPERO) (http://www.crd.york.ac.uk/PROSPERO/), the Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature (CINAHL), and Web of Science. We performed a grey literature search of relevant databases and websites using the resources listed in Grey Matters developed by the Canadian Agency for Drugs and Technologies in Health (CADTH). We also searched trial registries and abstracts from annual scientific critical care and delirium society meetings.
We sought randomized controlled trials (RCTs), including quasi-RCTs, of any pharmacological (drug) for treatment of delirium in critically ill adults. The drug intervention was to be compared to another active drug treatment, placebo, or a non-pharmacological intervention (e.g. mobilization). We did not apply any restrictions in terms of drug class, dose, route of administration, or duration of delirium or drug exposure. We defined critically ill patients as those treated in an ICU of any specialty (e.g. burn, cardiac, medical, surgical, trauma) or high-dependency unit.
Two review authors independently identified studies from the search results; four review authors (in pairs) performed data extraction and assessed risk of bias independently. We performed data synthesis through pairwise meta-analysis and network meta-analysis (NMA). Our hypothetical network structure was designed to be analysed at the drug class level and illustrated a network diagram of 'nodes' (i.e. drug classes) and 'edges' (i.e. comparisons between different drug classes from existing trials), thus describing a treatment network of all possible comparisons between drug classes. We assessed the quality of the body of evidence according to GRADE, as very low, low, moderate, or high.
We screened 7674 citations, from which 14 trials with 1844 participants met our inclusion criteria. Ten RCTs were placebo-controlled, and four reported comparisons of different drugs. Drugs examined in these trials were the following: antipsychotics (n = 10), alpha agonists (n = 3; all dexmedetomidine), statins (n = 2), opioids (n = 1; morphine), serotonin antagonists (n = 1; ondansetron), and cholinesterase (CHE) inhibitors (n = 1; rivastigmine). Only one of these trials consistently used non-pharmacological interventions that are known to improve patient outcomes in both intervention and control groups.Eleven studies (n = 1153 participants) contributed to analysis of the primary outcome. Results of the NMA showed that the intervention with the smallest ratio of means (RoM) (i.e. most preferred) compared with placebo was the alpha agonist dexmedetomidine (0.58; 95% credible interval (CrI) 0.26 to 1.27; surface under the cumulative ranking curve (SUCRA) 0.895; moderate-quality evidence). In order of descending SUCRA values (best to worst), the next best interventions were atypical antipsychotics (RoM 0.80, 95% CrI 0.50 to 1.11; SUCRA 0.738; moderate-quality evidence), opioids (RoM 0.88, 95% CrI 0.37 to 2.01; SUCRA 0.578; very-low quality evidence), and typical antipsychotics (RoM 0.96, 95% CrI 0.64 to1.36; SUCRA 0.468; high-quality evidence).The NMAs of multiple secondary outcomes revealed that only the alpha agonist dexmedetomidine was associated with a shorter duration of mechanical ventilation (RoM 0.55, 95% CrI 0.34 to 0.89; moderate-quality evidence), and the CHE inhibitor rivastigmine was associated with a longer ICU stay (RoM 2.19, 95% CrI 1.47 to 3.27; moderate-quality evidence). Adverse events often were not reported in these trials or, when reported, were rare; pair-wise analysis of QTc prolongation in seven studies did not show significant differences between antipsychotics, ondansetron, dexmedetomidine, and placebo.
AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: We identified trials of varying quality that examined six different drug classes for treatment of delirium in critically ill adults. We found evidence that the alpha agonist dexmedetomidine may shorten delirium duration, although this small effect (compared with placebo) was seen in pairwise analyses based on a single study and was not seen in the NMA results. Alpha agonists also ranked best for duration of mechanical ventilation and length of ICU stay, whereas the CHE inhibitor rivastigmine was associated with longer ICU stay. We found no evidence of a difference between placebo and any drug in terms of delirium-free and coma-free days, days with coma, physical restraint use, length of stay, long-term cognitive outcomes, or mortality. No studies reported delirium relapse, resolution of symptoms, or quality of life. The ten ongoing studies and the six studies awaiting classification that we identified, once published and assessed, may alter the conclusions of the review.
尽管谵妄通常是一种急性可逆性认知障碍,但其存在对重症患者的短期和长期预后均有毁灭性影响。我们对谵妄对患者预后负面影响的认识进展促使了多项评估多种药物干预措施的试验。然而,对于该人群可用药物干预措施的相对益处和安全性仍存在相当大的不确定性。
主要目标1. 评估药物干预措施对确诊或记录有谵妄高风险的成年重症患者谵妄持续时间的影响次要目标评估以下内容:1. 药物干预措施对无谵妄和无昏迷天数、昏迷天数、谵妄复发、机械通气持续时间、重症监护病房(ICU)和住院时间、死亡率以及长期预后(如认知、出院处置、健康相关生活质量)的影响;2. 此类治疗对成年重症患者的安全性。
我们检索了以下数据库,从其创建日期至2019年3月21日:使用Ovid平台的Ovid MEDLINE®、Ovid MEDLINE®在研及其他未索引引文、Embase Classic + Embase和PsycINFO。我们还检索了Wiley上的Cochrane图书馆、国际系统评价前瞻性注册库(PROSPERO)(http://www.crd.york.ac.uk/PROSPERO/)、护理及相关健康文献累积索引(CINAHL)以及科学引文索引。我们使用加拿大卫生药物和技术局(CADTH)开发的《灰色事项》中列出的资源对相关数据库和网站进行了灰色文献检索。我们还检索了试验注册库以及年度科学重症监护和谵妄学会会议的摘要。
我们寻找随机对照试验(RCT),包括准RCT,涉及任何用于治疗成年重症患者谵妄的确切药物。药物干预措施将与另一种活性药物治疗、安慰剂或非药物干预措施(如活动)进行比较。我们在药物类别、剂量、给药途径、谵妄持续时间或药物暴露方面未施加任何限制。我们将重症患者定义为在任何专科(如烧伤、心脏、内科、外科、创伤)的ICU或高依赖病房接受治疗的患者。
两名综述作者独立从检索结果中识别研究;四名综述作者(两两一组)进行数据提取并独立评估偏倚风险。我们通过成对荟萃分析和网状荟萃分析(NMA)进行数据综合。我们的假设网络结构旨在在药物类别层面进行分析,并展示了一个“节点”(即药物类别)和“边”(即现有试验中不同药物类别之间的比较)的网络图,从而描述了药物类别之间所有可能比较的治疗网络。我们根据GRADE评估证据质量,分为极低、低、中等或高。
我们筛选了7674条引文,其中14项试验共1844名参与者符合我们的纳入标准。10项RCT为安慰剂对照试验,4项报告了不同药物的比较。这些试验中研究的药物如下:抗精神病药(n = 10)、α激动剂(n = 3;均为右美托咪定)、他汀类药物(n = 2)、阿片类药物(n = 1;吗啡)、5-羟色胺拮抗剂(n = 1;昂丹司琼)和胆碱酯酶(CHE)抑制剂(n = 1;卡巴拉汀)。这些试验中只有一项始终使用已知可改善干预组和对照组患者预后的非药物干预措施。11项研究(n = 1153名参与者)纳入了主要结局分析。NMA结果显示,与安慰剂相比,平均比值(RoM)最小(即最优选)的干预措施是α激动剂右美托咪定(0.58;95%可信区间(CrI)0.26至1.27;累积排序曲线下面积(SUCRA)0.895;中等质量证据)。按SUCRA值从高到低(最佳到最差)排序,接下来的最佳干预措施是非典型抗精神病药(RoM 0.80,95% CrI 0.50至1.11;SUCRA 0.738;中等质量证据)、阿片类药物(RoM 0.88,95% CrI 0.37至2.01;SUCRA 0.578;极低质量证据)和典型抗精神病药(RoM?0.96,95% CrI 0.64至1.36;SUCRA 0.468;高质量证据)。多个次要结局的NMA显示,只有α激动剂右美托咪定与机械通气持续时间缩短相关(RoM 0.55,95% CrI 0.34至0.89;中等质量证据),而CHE抑制剂卡巴拉汀与ICU住院时间延长相关(RoM 2.19,95% CrI 1.47至3.27;中等质量证据)。这些试验中通常未报告不良事件,或即使报告也很罕见;对七项研究中QTc延长的成对分析未显示抗精神病药、昂丹司琼、右美托咪定和安慰剂之间存在显著差异。
我们识别了质量各异的试验,这些试验研究了六种不同药物类别用于治疗成年重症患者的谵妄。我们发现有证据表明α激动剂右美托咪定可能缩短谵妄持续时间,尽管这种小效应(与安慰剂相比)仅在基于一项研究的成对分析中可见,而在NMA结果中未出现。α激动剂在机械通气持续时间和ICU住院时间方面也排名最佳,而CHE抑制剂卡巴拉汀与ICU住院时间延长相关。我们未发现安慰剂与任何药物在无谵妄和无昏迷天数、昏迷天数、使用身体约束、住院时间、长期认知结局或死亡率方面存在差异的证据。没有研究报告谵妄复发、症状缓解或生活质量。我们识别出的十项正在进行的研究和六项等待分类的研究,一旦发表并评估,可能会改变本综述的结论。