Department of Pediatrics, Division of Pediatric Gastroenterology, Hepatology and Nutrition, Stanford University School of Medicine and Lucile Packard Children's Hospital, Palo Alto, California, USA.
Department of Pediatrics, Center for Advanced Intestinal Rehabilitation, Division of Pediatric Gastroenterology, Hepatology and Nutrition, University of Alabama at Birmingham, Birmingham, Alabama, USA.
JPEN J Parenter Enteral Nutr. 2022 Nov;46(8):1914-1922. doi: 10.1002/jpen.2369. Epub 2022 Mar 30.
Small bowel bacterial overgrowth (SBBO) is a common, but difficult to diagnose and treat, problem in pediatric short bowel syndrome (SBS). Lack of clinical consensus criteria and unknown sensitivity and specificity of bedside diagnosis makes research on this potential SBS disease modifier challenging. The objective of this research was to describe clinical care of SBBO among international intestinal rehabilitation and nutrition support (IR&NS) providers treating patients with SBS.
A secure, confidential, international, electronic survey of IR&NS practitioners was conducted between March 2021 and May 2021. All analyses were conducted in the R statistical computing framework, version 4.0.
Sixty percent of respondents agreed and 0% strongly disagreed that abdominal pain, distension, emesis, diarrhea, and malodorous stool, were attributable to SBBO. No more than 20% of respondents strongly agreed and no more than 40% agreed that any sign or symptom was specific for SBBO. For a first-time diagnosis, 31 practitioners agreed with use of a 7-day course of a single antibiotic, with a majority citing grade 5 evidence to inform their decisions (case series, uncontrolled studies, or expert opinion). The most common first antibiotic used to treat a new onset SBBO was metronidazole, and rifaximin was the second most commonly used. One hundred percent of respondents reported they would consider a consensus algorithm for SBBO, even if the algorithm may be divergent from their current practice.
SBBO practice varies widely among experienced IR&NS providers. Development of a clinical consensus algorithm may help standardize care to improve research and care of this complex problem and to identify risks and benefits of chronic antibiotic use in SBS.
小肠细菌过度生长(SBBO)是小儿短肠综合征(SBS)中一种常见但难以诊断和治疗的问题。缺乏临床共识标准以及床边诊断的敏感性和特异性未知,使得对这种潜在 SBS 疾病修饰因子的研究具有挑战性。本研究的目的是描述治疗 SBS 患者的国际肠道康复和营养支持(IR&NS)提供者对 SBBO 的临床护理。
2021 年 3 月至 2021 年 5 月,对 IR&NS 从业者进行了一项安全、保密的国际电子调查。所有分析均在 R 统计计算框架(版本 4.0)中进行。
60%的受访者同意,0%强烈不同意腹痛、腹胀、呕吐、腹泻和恶臭粪便归因于 SBBO。不超过 20%的受访者强烈同意,不超过 40%的受访者同意任何症状或体征是 SBBO 的特异性表现。对于首次诊断,31 名从业者同意使用 7 天疗程的单一抗生素,大多数人引用 5 级证据来支持他们的决策(病例系列、非对照研究或专家意见)。用于治疗新发性 SBBO 的最常见的第一种抗生素是甲硝唑,其次是利福昔明。100%的受访者表示,他们会考虑 SBBO 的共识算法,即使该算法可能与他们目前的实践不同。
经验丰富的 IR&NS 提供者之间的 SBBO 实践差异很大。制定临床共识算法可能有助于规范护理,以改善对这一复杂问题的研究和护理,并确定慢性抗生素使用在 SBS 中的风险和益处。