| Literature DB >> 28330506 |
Jing Gennie Wang1, Emilie Belley-Coté2, Lisa Burry3,4, Mark Duffett2,5, Timothy Karachi1,6, Dan Perri1,7, Waleed Alhazzani1,2, Frederick D'Aragon2, Hannah Wunsch8,9,10, Bram Rochwerg11,12.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: This systematic review and meta-analysis investigates the efficacy and safety of clonidine as a sedative in critically ill patients requiring invasive mechanical ventilation.Entities:
Keywords: Clonidine; Delirium; Mechanical ventilation; Sedation; Systematic review; Weaning
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28330506 PMCID: PMC5363026 DOI: 10.1186/s13054-017-1610-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Crit Care ISSN: 1364-8535 Impact factor: 9.097
Fig. 1Flow diagram depicting a summary of the search and selection process. CINAHL Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature, EMBASE Excerpta Medica database, RCTs randomized controlled trials
Description of the characteristics of the included randomized controlled trials
| Trial | Population | Intervention | Clonidine: adjunctive or stand-alone sedative agent | Comparator(s) | Outcome(s) of interest |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Duffett et al., 2014 | Mechanically ventilated children 1 month to 18 years old |
| Adjunctive (Midazolam, morphine equivalents) | n = 25 Placebo | Level of sedation (COMFORT or State Behavioural scales), dose of sedative agents (midazolam and morphine equivalents), duration of mechanical ventilation, length of PICU/hospital stay, adverse events |
| Farasatinasab et a.l, 2015 | Mechanically ventilated adults |
| Adjunctive (Midazolam, morphine equivalents, propofol) |
| Level of sedation (Ramsay Sedation Score), dose of sedative agents (midazolam and morphine equivalents), total amount of sedation used, adverse events |
| Hünseler et al., 2014 | Mechanically ventilated newborns and children 0 days to 2 years old. The newborn subgroup was excluded in data analysis |
| Adjunctive (Midazolam, fentanyl, thiopentone prn) |
| Level of sedation (Hartwig and COMFORT scores), dose of sedative agents (fentanyl and midazolam), duration of mechanical ventilation, length of ICU stay, mortality |
| Rubino et al., 2009 | Mechanically ventilated adults who had undergone surgical correction of acute type A aortic dissection |
| Adjunctive (Fentanyl, propofol) |
| Incidence of delirium, severity of delirium (Delirium Detection Score), duration of weaning, length of ICU stay |
| Spies et al., 1996 | Mechanically ventilated post-trauma surgery adults who were alcohol-dependent |
| Adjunctive (Flunitrazepam) | (1) | Length of ICU stay, incidence of alcohol withdrawal syndrome (revised clinical institute withdrawal assessment for alcohol scale), adverse events |
| Srivastava et al., 2014 | Mechanically ventilated adults |
| Stand-alone |
| Level of sedation (Ramsay sedation score), dose of sedative agents (diazepam, dexmedetomidine, fentanyl), hemodynamic changes, adverse events |
| Wolf et al., 2014 | Mechanically ventilated children age 30 days to 15 years |
| Adjunctive (Midazolam, morphine) |
| Level of sedation (COMFORT score), time spent adequately sedated, duration of sedation, adverse events, length of ICU/hospital stay, ICU mortality |
| Molon et al., 2007 | Mechanically ventilated children (age criteria unspecified) |
| Adjunctive (Midazolam, morphine) |
| Dose of sedatives (midazolam and morphine), duration of sedation, incidence of withdrawal syndrome (Finnegan score) |
The GRADE approach was used to assess the certainty of evidence
| Quality assessment | № of patients | Effect | Quality | Importance | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| № of studies | Study design | Risk of bias | Inconsistency | Indirectness | Imprecision | Other considerations | Clonidine | Placebo | Relative (95% CI) | Absolute (95% CI) | ||
| Duration of mechanical ventilation (assessed with: days) | ||||||||||||
| 6 | Randomized trials | Not seriousa | Seriousb | Not serious | Not seriousc | None | 200 | 217 | - | MD 0.05 days more (0.65 fewer to 0.75 more) | ⨁⨁⨁ MODERATE | CRITICAL |
| ICU mortality | ||||||||||||
| 5 | Randomized trials | Seriousd | Not serious | Not serious | Seriouse | None | 14/164 (8.5%) | 23/219 (10.5%) | RR 1.00 (0.50 to 2.02) | 0 fewer per 1000(from 53 fewer to 107 more) | ⨁⨁ LOW | CRITICAL |
| Dose of benzodiazepines | ||||||||||||
| 4 | Randomized trials | Not seriousf | Seriousg | Not serious | Not seriousc | None | 130 | 134 | - | SMD 0.02 SD higher (0.34 lower to 0.39 higher) | ⨁⨁⨁ MODERATE | CRITICAL |
| Dose of narcotics | ||||||||||||
| 4 | Randomized trials | Not seriousf | Not serious | Not serious | Seriouse | None | 130 | 134 | - | SMD 0.26 SD lower (0.5 lower to 0.02 lower) | ⨁⨁⨁ MODERATE | CRITICAL |
| Incidence of withdrawal symptoms from other sedatives | ||||||||||||
| 3 | Randomized trials | Seriousi | Not serious | Not serious | Serioush | None | 40/120 (33.3%) | 49/124 (39.5%) | RR 0.91 (0.67 to 1.23) | 36 fewer per 1000 (from 91 more to 130 fewer) | ⨁⨁ LOW | IMPORTANT |
| ICU length of stay | ||||||||||||
| 6 | Randomized trials | Seriousj | Not serious | Not serious | Not seriousc | None | 233 | 240 | - | MD 0.04 days more (0.46 fewer to 0.53 more) | ⨁⨁⨁ MODERATE | CRITICAL |
| Incidence of clinically significant hypotension | ||||||||||||
| 4 | Randomized trials | Not seriousk | Not serious | Not serious | Seriousl | None | 31/178 (17.4%) | 12/226 (5.3%) | RR 3.11 (1.64 to 5.87) | 112 more per 1000 (from 34 more to 259 more) | ⨁⨁⨁ MODERATE | CRITICAL |
| Incidence of clinically significant bradycardia | ||||||||||||
| 4 | Randomized trials | Not seriousk | Not serious | Not serious | Very seriouse | None | 14/178 (7.9%) | 12/226 (5.3%) | RR 1.34 (0.45 to 3.98) | 18 more per 1000 (from 29 fewer to 158 more) | ⨁⨁ LOW | CRITICAL |
CI confidence interval, MD mean difference, RR risk ratio, SMD standardized mean difference
aFour of six included studies had issues related to high risk of bias. However, excluding high risk of bias studies had no effect on overall pooled estimates
bHigh I value of 86%
cPoint estimate shows no effect. Confidence intervals do not rule out slight harm or slight benefit, however, neither meet clinical significance threshold
dAll included studies for this outcome were at high risk of bias
eConfidence intervals do not exclude benefit or harm
Confidence intervals do not exclude benefit or harm. Low number of patients and event numbers
Two of three trials had issues related to high risk of bias. However, sensitivity analysis excluding high risk of bias trials did not alter results
High I value of 82%
Confidence intervals do not exclude benefit or harm, with the benefit potentially meeting clinical threshold. Low number of patients
fTwo of four trials had issues related to high risk of bias. However sensitivity analysis excluding high risk of bias trials did not alter results
gHigh I value of 55%
hConfidence intervals do not exclude benefit or harm. Low number of patients
iTwo of three trials had issues related to high risk of bias. However, sensitivity analysis excluding high risk of bias trials results in a potentially different outcome
jFour of six trials had issues related to high risk of bias. However, sensitivity analysis excluding high risk of bias trials results in a potentially different outcome
High I value of 52%
kThree of four trials had issues related to high risk of bias. However sensitivity analysis excluding the high risk of bias trials did not alter results
lLow number of events
Fig. 2Forest plot comparing the duration of mechanical ventilation between the clonidine group and the non-clonidine group (control). Results are depicted using a random effects model with mean difference and 95% confidence intervals
Fig. 3Forest plot comparing the dose of narcotics used between the clonidine group and the non-clonidine group (control). Results are depicted using a random effects model with standard mean difference and 95% confidence intervals
Fig. 4Forest plot comparing the incidence of clinically significant hypotension requiring intervention between the clonidine group and the non-clonidine group (control). Results are depicted using a random effects model with relative risk ratio and 95% confidence intervals