| Literature DB >> 27686962 |
Rick Dersch1,2, Tilman Hottenrott3, Stefanie Schmidt4,5, Harriet Sommer6, Hans-Iko Huppertz7, Sebastian Rauer3, Joerg J Meerpohl4,8.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Many aspects of pharmacological treatment of Lyme neuroborreliosis in children, such as choice of drug, dosage, and duration are subject to intense debates, leading to uncertainties in patients' parents and healthcare providers alike. To assess the available evidence for pharmacological treatment for children with Lyme neuroborreliosis we conducted a systematic review.Entities:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27686962 PMCID: PMC5043629 DOI: 10.1186/s12883-016-0708-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Neurol ISSN: 1471-2377 Impact factor: 2.474
Fig. 1PRISMA flow chart
Characteristics of included studies
| Study | Sample size | Case definition | Interventions | Length of treatment | Setting | Country |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| RCT | ||||||
| Millner 1995 | 41 | possible | penicillin G 300,000-375,000 IU/kg, ceftriaxone 100 mg/kg, sample size of groups not reported | 14 days | Tertiary care center | Austria |
| Müllegger 1991 | 23 | possible | penicillin G 400,000-500,000 IU/kg ( | 14 days | Tertiary care center | Austria |
| Prospective cohort studies | ||||||
| Jörbeck 1987 | 9 | possible | penicillin G 150 mg/kg ( | 10–19 days | Tertiary care center | Sweden |
| Retrospective cohort studies | ||||||
| Thorstrand 2002 | 203 | probable | ceftriaxone 100 mg/kg, maximum 2 g ( | 10 days | Tertiary care center | Sweden |
| Bingham 1995 | 19 | possible | ceftriaxone, amoxicillin, erythromycin, penicillin, doxycycline, steroids, aciclovir or no treatment. Dosages not stated. | 14–30 days | Tertiary care center | USA |
| Skowronek-Bala 2008 | 9 | possible | ceftazidim + doxycycline ( | 3–6 weeks | Tertiary care center | Poland |
Fig. 2Risk of bias in randomized controlled trials
Fig. 3Risk of bias in non-randomized studies
Fig. 4Forest-plot for the comparison of betalactam antibiotics versus doxycycline for residual neurological symptoms in non-randomized studies
Fig. 5Forest-plot for the comparison of penicillin G versus ceftriaxone for residual neurological symptoms
Fig. 6Forest-plot for the comparison of combinations of antibiotic treatments versus single drugs on residual neurological symptoms
GRADE evidence table for the comparison betalactam antibiotics vs. doxycycline for children with Lyme neuroborreliosis
| Quality assessment | № of patients | Effect | Quality | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| № of studies | Study design | Risk of bias | Inconsistency | Indirectness | Imprecision | Betalactam antibiotics | Doxycycline | Relative (95 % CI) | |
| Neurological symptoms at last reported time point | |||||||||
| 3 | observational studies | very seriousa | not serious | seriousb | seriousc | 15/195 (7.7 %) | 3/25 (12.0 %) | not pooled | ⨁◯◯◯ VERY LOW |
abaseline confounding, selected patients, lack of blinding, interventions insufficiently described
bheterogeneous interventions, interventions not clearly described
csmall sample size, optimal information size not met
GRADE evidence table for the comparison penicillin vs. ceftriaxone for children with Lyme neuroborreliosis
| Quality assessment | № of patients | Effect | Quality | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| № of studies | Study design | Risk of bias | Inconsistency | Indirectness | Imprecision | Penicillin | Ceftriaxone | Relative (95 % CI) | |
| Neurological symptoms at last reported time point | |||||||||
| 1 | randomised trials | seriousa | not serious | not serious | very seriousb | 0/11 (0.0 %) | 0/12 (0.0 %) | not estimable | ⨁◯◯◯ VERY LOW |
| Neurological symptoms at last reported time point | |||||||||
| 2 | observational studies | very seriousc | not serious | seriousd | seriouse | 2/55 (3.6 %) | 4/28 (14.3 %) | not pooled | ⨁◯◯◯ VERY LOW |
ano blinding, randomisation and allocation concealment not stated appropriately, selective outcomes reporting cannot be excluded
bvery small sample size, optimal information size not met
cbaseline confounding, selected patients, lack of blinding, interventions insufficiently described
dheterogeneous interventions, interventions not clearly described
esmall sample size, optimal information size not met
GRADE evidence table for the comparison combination of antibiotics vs. single drugs for children with Lyme neuroborreliosis
| Quality assessment | № of patients | Effect | Quality | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| № of studies | Study design | Risk of bias | Inconsistency | Indirectness | Imprecision | Combination of antibiotics | Single drugs | Relative (95 % CI) | |
| Neurological symptoms at last reported time point | |||||||||
| 1 | observational studies | very seriousa | not serious | seriousb | seriousc | 1/7 (14.3 %) | 2/2 (100.0 %) | RR 4.44 (0.96 to 20.50) | ⨁◯◯◯ VERY LOW |
acritical risk of bias according to ARCOBAT NRSI due to baseline confounding, selected patients, lack of blinding, interventions insufficiently described
bheterogeneous interventions applied
csmall sample size, optimal information size not met