Craig Simon S, Dalziel Stuart R, Powell Colin Ve, Graudins Andis, Babl Franz E, Lunny Carole
Department of Paediatrics, School of Clinical Sciences at Monash Health, Faculty of Medicine, Nursing and Health Sciences, Monash University, Clayton, Australia.
Emergency Research, Murdoch Children's Research Institute, Parkville, Australia.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2020 Aug 5;8(8):CD012977. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD012977.pub2.
Asthma is an illness that commonly affects adults and children, and it serves as a common reason for children to attend emergency departments. An asthma exacerbation is characterised by acute or subacute worsening of shortness of breath, cough, wheezing, and chest tightness and may be triggered by viral respiratory infection, poor compliance with usual medication, a change in the weather, or exposure to allergens or irritants. Most children with asthma have mild or moderate exacerbations and respond well to first-line therapy (inhaled short-acting beta-agonists and systemic corticosteroids). However, the best treatment for the small proportion of seriously ill children who do not respond to first-line therapy is not well understood. Currently, a large number of treatment options are available and there is wide variation in management.
Main objective - To summarise Cochrane Reviews with or without meta-analyses of randomised controlled trials on the efficacy and safety of second-line treatment for children with acute exacerbations of asthma (i.e. after first-line treatments, titrated oxygen delivery, and administration of intermittent inhaled short-acting beta-agonists and oral corticosteroids have been tried and have failed) Secondary objectives - To identify gaps in the current evidence base that will inform recommendations for future research and subsequent Cochrane Reviews - To categorise information on reported outcome measures used in trials of escalation of treatment for acute exacerbations of asthma in children, and to make recommendations for development and reporting of standard outcomes in future trials and reviews - To identify relevant randomised controlled trials that have been published since the date of publication of each included review METHODS: We included Cochrane Reviews assessing interventions for children with acute exacerbations of asthma. We searched the Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews. The search is current to 28 December 2019. We also identified trials that were potentially eligible for, but were not currently included in, published reviews. We assessed the quality of included reviews using the ROBIS criteria (tool used to assess risk of bias in systematic reviews). We presented an evidence synthesis of data from reviews alongside an evidence map of clinical trials. Primary outcomes were length of stay, hospital admission, intensive care unit admission, and adverse effects. We summarised all findings in the text and reported data for each outcome in 'Additional tables'.
We identified 17 potentially eligible Cochrane Reviews but extracted data from, and rated the quality of, 13 reviews that reported results for children alone. We excluded four reviews as one did not include any randomised controlled trials (RCTs), one did not provide subgroup data for children, and the last two had been updated and replaced by subsequent reviews. The 13 reviews included 67 trials; the number of trials in each review ranged from a single trial up to 27 trials. The vast majority of comparisons included between one and three trials, involving fewer than 100 participants. The total number of participants included in reviews ranged from 40 to 2630. All studies included children; 16 (24%) included children younger than two years of age. Most of the reviews reported search dates older than four years. We have summarised the published evidence as outlined in Cochrane Reviews. Key findings, in terms of our primary outcomes, are that (1) intravenous magnesium sulfate was the only intervention shown to reduce hospital length of stay (high-certainty evidence); (2) no evidence suggested that any intervention reduced the risk of intensive care admission (low- to very low-certainty evidence); (3) the risk of hospital admission was reduced by the addition of inhaled anticholinergic agents to inhaled beta-agonists (moderate-certainty evidence), the use of intravenous magnesium sulfate (high-certainty evidence), and the use of inhaled heliox (low-certainty evidence); (4) the addition of inhaled magnesium sulfate to usual bronchodilator therapy appears to reduce serious adverse events during hospital admission (moderate-certainty evidence); (5) aminophylline increased vomiting compared to placebo (moderate-certainty evidence) and increased nausea and nausea/vomiting compared to intravenous beta-agonists (low-certainty evidence); and (6) the addition of anticholinergic therapy to short-acting beta-agonists appeared to reduce the risk of nausea (high-certainty evidence) and tremor (moderate-certainty evidence) but not vomiting (low-certainty evidence). We considered 4 of the 13 reviews to be at high risk of bias based on the ROBIS framework. In all cases, this was due to concerns regarding identification and selection of studies. The certainty of evidence varied widely (by review and also by outcome) and ranged from very low to high.
AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: This overview provides the most up-to-date evidence on interventions for escalation of therapy for acute exacerbations of asthma in children from Cochrane Reviews of randomised controlled trials. A vast majority of comparisons involved between one and three trials and fewer than 100 participants, making it difficult to assess the balance between benefits and potential harms. Due to the lack of comparative studies between various treatment options, we are unable to make firm practice recommendations. Intravenous magnesium sulfate appears to reduce both hospital length of stay and the risk of hospital admission. Hospital admission is also reduced with the addition of inhaled anticholinergic agents to inhaled beta-agonists. However, further research is required to determine which patients are most likely to benefit from these therapies. Due to the relatively rare incidence of acute severe paediatric asthma, multi-centre research will be required to generate high-quality evidence. A number of existing Cochrane Reviews should be updated, and we recommend that a new review be conducted on the use of high-flow nasal oxygen therapy. Important priorities include development of an internationally agreed core outcome set for future trials in acute severe asthma exacerbations and determination of clinically important differences in these outcomes, which can then inform adequately powered future trials.
哮喘是一种常见于成人和儿童的疾病,也是儿童前往急诊科就诊的常见原因。哮喘急性发作的特征是呼吸急促、咳嗽、喘息和胸闷的急性或亚急性加重,可能由病毒性呼吸道感染、未按常规用药、天气变化或接触过敏原或刺激物引发。大多数哮喘儿童发作程度较轻或中等,对一线治疗(吸入短效β-受体激动剂和全身用糖皮质激素)反应良好。然而,对于一小部分对一线治疗无反应的重症儿童,最佳治疗方法尚不清楚。目前,有大量治疗选择,管理方式差异很大。
主要目的——总结关于哮喘急性发作儿童二线治疗疗效和安全性的Cochrane系统评价(有或无随机对照试验的Meta分析)(即一线治疗、滴定式氧疗、吸入短效β-受体激动剂和口服糖皮质激素治疗均已尝试但失败后)。次要目的——识别当前证据基础中的差距,为未来研究和后续Cochrane系统评价提供建议——对儿童哮喘急性发作治疗升级试验中报告的结局指标信息进行分类,并为未来试验和评价中标准结局的制定和报告提出建议——识别自每项纳入评价发表日期以来发表的相关随机对照试验。
我们纳入了评估哮喘急性发作儿童干预措施的Cochrane系统评价。我们检索了Cochrane系统评价数据库。检索截至2019年12月28日。我们还识别了可能符合纳入标准但未被纳入已发表评价的试验。我们使用ROBIS标准(用于评估系统评价偏倚风险的工具)评估纳入评价的质量。我们呈现了评价数据的证据综合以及临床试验的证据图谱。主要结局为住院时间、住院、入住重症监护病房和不良反应。我们在正文中总结了所有结果,并在“附加表格”中报告了每个结局的数据。
我们识别出17项可能符合纳入标准的Cochrane系统评价,但从13项仅报告儿童结果的评价中提取了数据并对其质量进行了评级。我们排除了4项评价,其中一项未包括任何随机对照试验,一项未提供儿童亚组数据,最后两项已更新并被后续评价取代。这13项评价包括67项试验;每项评价中的试验数量从1项到27项不等。绝大多数比较涉及1至3项试验,参与者少于100人。评价中纳入的参与者总数从40人到2630人不等。所有研究均纳入了儿童;16项(24%)纳入了2岁以下儿童。大多数评价报告的检索日期早于4年。我们按照Cochrane系统评价的概述总结了已发表的证据。就我们的主要结局而言,关键发现如下:(1)静脉注射硫酸镁是唯一显示可缩短住院时间的干预措施(高确定性证据);(2)没有证据表明任何干预措施可降低入住重症监护病房的风险(低至极低确定性证据);(3)吸入β-受体激动剂加用吸入性抗胆碱能药物、使用静脉注射硫酸镁和使用吸入氦氧混合气可降低住院风险(中等确定性证据、高确定性证据、低确定性证据);(4)在常规支气管扩张剂治疗中加用吸入硫酸镁似乎可减少住院期间的严重不良事件(中等确定性证据);(5)与安慰剂相比,氨茶碱增加呕吐(中等确定性证据),与静脉注射β-受体激动剂相比,增加恶心和恶心/呕吐(低确定性证据);(6)短效β-受体激动剂加用抗胆碱能治疗似乎可降低恶心风险(高确定性证据)和震颤风险(中等确定性证据),但不能降低呕吐风险(低确定性证据)。根据ROBIS框架,我们认为13项评价中有4项存在高偏倚风险。在所有情况下,这是由于对研究的识别和选择存在担忧。证据的确定性差异很大(因评价和结局而异),范围从极低到高。
本概述提供了Cochrane随机对照试验系统评价中关于儿童哮喘急性发作治疗升级干预措施的最新证据。绝大多数比较涉及1至3项试验且参与者少于100人,难以评估获益与潜在危害之间的平衡。由于缺乏各种治疗选择之间的比较研究,我们无法提出明确的实践建议。静脉注射硫酸镁似乎可缩短住院时间并降低住院风险。吸入β-受体激动剂加用吸入性抗胆碱能药物也可降低住院风险。然而,需要进一步研究以确定哪些患者最可能从这些治疗中获益。由于急性重症儿童哮喘发病率相对较低,需要进行多中心研究以产生高质量证据。一些现有Cochrane系统评价应更新,我们建议对高流量鼻导管吸氧疗法的使用进行新的评价。重要的优先事项包括为未来急性重症哮喘发作试验制定国际认可的核心结局集,并确定这些结局在临床上的重要差异,从而为未来有足够样本量的试验提供依据。