Dainiak Nicholas, Albanese Joseph
Department of Therapeutic Radiology, Yale University School of Medicine, 15 York Street, New Haven, CT 06520, United States of America.
Center for Emergency Preparedness and Disaster Response, Yale New Haven Health, 99 Hawley Lane, Stratford, CT 06614, United States of America.
J Radiol Prot. 2022 Jul 19;42(3). doi: 10.1088/1361-6498/ac7d18.
Acute radiation syndrome (ARS) is a clinical syndrome involving four organ systems, resulting in the hematopoietic syndrome (HS), gastrointestinal subsyndrome (GIS), neurovascular subsyndrome (NVS) and cutaneous subsyndrome (CS). Since few healthcare providers have seen an ARS case, evidence-based recommendations are needed to guide medical management in a mass casualty scenario. The authors reviewed recommendations from evidence-based and narrative reviews by expert consultants to the World Health Organisation (WHO), a subsequent review of published HS cases, and infectious disease guidelines for management of febrile neutropenia. The WHO Consultancy applied a rigorous grading system to evaluate treatment strategies described in published ARS cases as of 2009, strategies to manage HS in unirradiated persons, results of ARS studies in animal models of ARS, and recommendations of prior expert panels. Major findings for HS were (a) no randomised controlled studies have been performed, (b) data are restricted by the lack of comparator groups, and (c) reports of countermeasures for management of injury to non-hematopoietic organs are often incomplete. Strength of recommendations ranged from strong to weak. Countermeasures of potential benefit include cytokines and for a subgroup of HS patients, hematopoietic stem cell transplantation. These recommendations did not change in a subsequent analysis of HS cases. Recommendations also included fluoroquinolones, bowel decontamination, serotonin receptor antagonists, loperamide and enteral nutrition for GIS; supportive care for NVS; and topical steroids, antihistamines and antibiotics, and surgical excision/grafting for CS. Also reviewed are critical care management guidelines, the role of mesenchymal stem cells for CS, the potential of a platelet-stimulating cytokine for HS, and the author's approach to clinical management of microbial infections associated with ARS based on published guidelines of infectious disease experts. Today's management of HS is supported by evidence-based guidelines. Management of non-HS subsyndromes is supported by a narrative review of the literature and recommendations of infectious disease societies.
急性放射综合征(ARS)是一种涉及四个器官系统的临床综合征,可导致造血综合征(HS)、胃肠道亚综合征(GIS)、神经血管亚综合征(NVS)和皮肤亚综合征(CS)。由于很少有医疗服务提供者见过ARS病例,因此需要基于证据的建议来指导大规模伤亡情况下的医疗管理。作者回顾了世界卫生组织(WHO)专家顾问进行的循证综述和叙述性综述中的建议、随后对已发表的HS病例的回顾以及发热性中性粒细胞减少症管理的传染病指南。WHO咨询小组应用了严格的分级系统来评估截至2009年已发表的ARS病例中描述的治疗策略、未受辐射者HS的管理策略、ARS动物模型中ARS研究的结果以及先前专家小组的建议。HS的主要发现包括:(a)尚未进行随机对照研究;(b)数据因缺乏对照组而受限;(c)关于非造血器官损伤管理对策的报告往往不完整。建议的强度从强到弱不等。潜在有益的对策包括细胞因子,对于一部分HS患者,还包括造血干细胞移植。这些建议在随后对HS病例的分析中没有改变。建议还包括针对GIS使用氟喹诺酮类药物、肠道去污、5-羟色胺受体拮抗剂、洛哌丁胺和肠内营养;对NVS进行支持性护理;对CS使用局部类固醇、抗组胺药和抗生素,以及手术切除/移植。还回顾了重症监护管理指南、间充质干细胞对CS的作用、一种血小板刺激细胞因子对HS的潜力,以及作者基于传染病专家已发表的指南对与ARS相关的微生物感染进行临床管理的方法。当今HS的管理得到了循证指南的支持。非HS亚综合征的管理得到了文献叙述性综述和传染病学会建议的支持。