| Literature DB >> 23662131 |
Chuan Zou1, Guobin Su, Yuchi Wu, Fuhua Lu, Wei Mao, Xusheng Liu.
Abstract
Aims. To explore whether Astragalus or its formulations could prevent upper respiratory infection in children with nephrotic syndrome and how best to use it. Methods. We transformed a common clinical question in practice to an answerable question according to the PICO principle. Databases, including the Cochrane Library (Issue 5, 2012), PUBMED (1966-2012.8), CBM (1978-2012.8), VIP (1989-2012.8), and CNKI (1979-2012.8), were searched to identify Cochrane systematic reviews and clinical trials. Then, the quality of and recommendations from the clinical evidence were evaluated using the GRADEpro software. Results. The search yielded 537 papers. Only two studies with high validity were included for synthesis calculations. The results showed that Astragalus granules could effectively reduce URTI in children with nephrotic syndrome compared with prednisone treatment alone (23.9% versus 42.9%; RR = 0.56 and 95% CI = 0.33-0.93). The dose of Astragalus granules was 2.25 gram (equivalent to 15 gram crude Astragalus) twice per day, at least for 3-6 months. The level of evidence quality was low, but we still recommended the evidence to the patient according to GRADEpro with the opinion of the expert. Followup showed the incidence of URTI in this child decreased significantly. Conclusions. Astragalus granules may reduce the incidence of URTI in children with nephrotic syndrome.Entities:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23662131 PMCID: PMC3638577 DOI: 10.1155/2013/352130
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Evid Based Complement Alternat Med ISSN: 1741-427X Impact factor: 2.629
Search strategies.
| Database | Searching strategies | Hits |
|---|---|---|
| PubMed (1966~2012.8) | P: (“Kidney diseases” [Mesh] OR “Glomerulonephritis, Membranous” [Mesh] OR “Glomerulonephritis, IGA” [Mesh] OR “Glomerulonephritis” [Mesh] OR “Glomerulonephritis, Membranoproliferative” [Mesh] OR “Glomerulosclerosis, focal segmental” [Mesh] OR “Glomerulonephritis” [text word] OR “nephrosis, lipoid” [MeSH terms] OR (“nephrosis” [all fields] AND “lipoid” [all fields]) OR “lipoid nephrosis” [all fields] OR (“minimal” [all fields] AND “change” [all fields] AND “nephropathy” [all fields]) OR “minimal change nephropathy” [all fields] OR “nephropathy” [text word] OR “Glomerulo*”
[text word] OR “nephrotic syndrome” [Mesh] OR “nephr*”
[text word]) | P + I = 59 |
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| EMBASE (1974~2012.8) | P: #1 OR #2 OR #3 OR #4 OR #5 OR #6 | P + I = 266 |
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| Cochrane Library (Issue 5, 2012) | Searching field: title, abstract, or keywords | P: 37 |
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| CBM (1978~2012.8) | Subject or title or abstract: Nephritic syndrome AND respiratory infection | 30 |
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| CNKI (1979~2012.8) | Subject or title or abstract: Nephritic syndrome AND respiratory infection | 301 |
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| VIP (1989~2012.8) | Title or keyword: Nephritic syndrome AND respiratory infection | 25 |
*Refers to searching for all terms that begin with a word, enter the word followed by an asterisk (*).
Figure 1Search process: flow diagram of included and excluded studies. A search for relevant studies was performed using the PubMed database, Embase, Cochrane library, CNKI, CBM, and VIP subsequently filtered out based on the inclusion/exclusion described.
Characteristics of the included studies.
| Study design | Population | Intervention | Comparison | Duration | Outcome | Followup | Adverse reaction | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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Kang, 2005 [ | Parallel RCT | Age | STD prednisone + Huangqi (Astragalus) granules | Infection | ||||
| STD prednisone | 3 to 6 months | URTI | Not mentioned | NS | ||||
| Relapse | ||||||||
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J. Chen and S. Q. Chen, 2008 [ | Parallel RCT | Age | STD prednisone + Huangqi (Astragalus) granules (oral) | Infection | ||||
| STD prednisone | 3 months | URTI | 8 months | NS | ||||
| Relapse | ||||||||
STD prednisone: initial dose 1 mg/kg/d for 8–12 weeks. Every other day for 6 months. When urine protein is negative, decreased 5 mg/wk until reduced dose tapered gradually to 0.4 mg/kg/d over 6 months and maintained at this dose for 12–18 months. Finally, tapered gradually until withdrawal to 0.5 mg/kg/d, then 1 mg/kg every other day for 6 months.
STD prednisone + CTX: initial prednisone dose 1 mg/kg/d plus CTX 50 mg b.i.d.p.o. (total in 8 mg).
URTI: upper respiratory tubular infection; I: intervention; C: comparision.
Characteristics of the included Cochrane reviews.
| Intervention | Comparision | Number of RCTs | Participants | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Wu et al., 2012 [ | IVIG, thymosin, OTF, MPT, BCG, Lantigen B, TIAOJINING, Huangqi granules + baseline treatment | Baseline treatment | 12 | 762 |
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| Yuan et al., 2008 [ | Huangqi injection, Huangqi and red Chinese, Huangqi and Danggui + baseline treatment date | Baseline treatment | 3 | 128 |
IVIG: intravenous immunoglobulin; OTF: oral transfer factor; MPT: mannan peptide tablet; BCG: Bacillus Calmette-Guerin (BCG) vaccine injection; and baseline treatment: STD prednisone.
Grade assessment of studies. Question: should Huangqi versus conventional treatment be used for upper respiratory tract infection? Settings: parallel RCT.
| Upper respiratory tract infection rate | ||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Quality assessment | No. of patients | Effect | Quality | Importance | ||||||||
| No. of studies | Design | Risk of bias | Inconsistency | Indirectness | Imprecision | Other considerations | Huangqi | Conventional treatment | Relative (95% CI) | Absolute | ||
| 16/67 (23.9%) | 27/63 | 19 fewer per 100 (from 3 fewer to 29 fewer) | ||||||||||
| 2 | Randomised trials | Serious1 | No serious inconsistency | No serious indirectness | Serious2 | None | 10% | RR 0.56 (0.33 to 0.93) | 4 fewer per 100 (from 1 fewer to 7 fewer) | ⨁⨁○○ | Critical | |
| 40% | 18 fewer per 100 (from 3 fewer to 27 fewer) | |||||||||||
1Studies were at unclear risk of bias, for the paper did not provide the bias information of the study design. So we determine the potential limitations are likely to lower confidence in the estimate of effect.
2Total number of events is less than 300, and a relative risk reduction (RRR) or relative risk increase (RRI) is greater than 25%.
Quality assessment of the included studies.
| Concealment of allocation | Randomization sequence generation | Blinding | Selective reporting | Intention-to-treat analysis | Level of evidence | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kang, 2005 [ | NS | Unclear1 | No | Not mentioned | Not mention | Unclear risk |
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| J. Chen and S. Q. Chen, 2008 [ | NS | Quasi-randomization2 | No information | Not mentioned | Not mention | Unclear risk |
1The study did not provide the information on the method of random sequence generation and only presented the data that participants with nephrotic syndrome were randomly allocated to treatment and control groups.
2The patients with nephrotic syndrome were allocated to the treatment and control groups according to the order of admission.