| Literature DB >> 28883933 |
Emma Torbicki1, Justin Oh1, Sharmistha Mishra2, Andrea V Page2,3, Andrea K Boggild2,3,4,5,6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Post-infectious irritable bowel syndrome (PI-IBS) due to traveler's diarrhea is the second most common illness seen in post-travel clinics, yet its optimal management remains unknown. We performed a systematic review to evaluate treatment efficacy in PI-IBS.Entities:
Keywords: Chronic diarrhea; Gastroenteritis; Knowledge synthesis; Travel medicine; Traveler’s diarrhea
Year: 2015 PMID: 28883933 PMCID: PMC5526367 DOI: 10.1186/s40794-015-0002-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Trop Dis Travel Med Vaccines ISSN: 2055-0936
Fig. 1Flow diagram of article exclusions by stage of systematic review
Summary of interventions, study details, results and quality of evidence
| Source | N (Intervention: Placebo) | Study Type | PI-IBS inclusion criteria | Intervention (Type, dose, length of intervention, frequency) | Duration of intervention | Outcome(s) | Quality of evidence (modified GRADE [ |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bafutto | 61 (18:43) | cohort | Rome III with IBS-D, as reported by patient | - Mesalazine | 30 days | - stool frequency decreased by 1.33 stools/day on average | Moderate |
| - 30 days | The study is unclear as to how the randomization and allocation concealment were conducted. | ||||||
| - 800 mg | |||||||
| - TID | |||||||
| - stool form and consistency improved by 2.17 based on the Bristol stool scale (16) | |||||||
| Hanevik | 18 (11:7) | RCT | History of giardiasis 2 years prior and Rome II criteria | - Mesalazine | 6 weeks | - no significant change in symptoms following mesalazine treatment | Low |
| - 6 weeks | The study was a pilot study with small sample. It is unclear as to how to randomization and allocation concealment were conducted | ||||||
| - 800 mg | |||||||
| - BID | |||||||
| Tuteja | 20 (10:10) | RCT | Onset of IBS symptoms in previously asymptomatic individuals after acute gastroenteritis characterized by two or more of: diarrhea, vomiting, fever, as reported by the patient | - Mesalamine | 12 weeks | - no significant change in symptoms following mesalazine treatment | Low |
| - 12 weeks | Insufficient sample size | ||||||
| - 1.6 g | |||||||
| - BID | |||||||
| Dizdar | 34 (15:39) | RCT | Persisting abdominal symptoms 12 months after | - Ondansetron | 2 days | - no significant improvement in symptoms after ondansetron treatment - Significant improvement in post-prandial nausea score before vs after ondanestron treatment (27.47 ± 21.89 vs 41.40 ± 23.04) | Moderate |
| - 2 days | Small sample size | ||||||
| - 8 mg | |||||||
| - QD | |||||||
| Dunlop | 34 (20:14) | RCT | New bowel symptoms in a previously asymptomatic individuals immediately after an acute illness characterized by two or more of: diarrhea, fever, vomiting, positive stool culture, as recorded by the patient or gastroenterology clinic | - Prednisone | 21 days | - No improvement in abdominal pain, diarrhea, frequency or urgency based on a gastrointestinal symptom rating scale | Moderate |
| - 21 days | Small sample size | ||||||
| - 30 mg | |||||||
| - QD | |||||||
| Menon | 25 (15:10) | Retrospective | History of an acute gastroenteritis precipitating chronic diarrhea, as reported in clinic notes and hospital database | - Cholestyramine | Variable (1–15 years) | - decrease in diarrhea frequency of 5.9 stools/day | Low |
| - 1–15 years | Retrospective study that only included people with bile acid malabsorption and infectious gastroenteritis. | ||||||
| - 8.22 g | |||||||
| - QD | |||||||
| Niaz | 16 (16:0) | Retrospective | History of an acute gastroenteritis precipitating chronic diarrhea defined as distinct change in bowel habit with 4–15 loose watery motions per day as reported by the patient | - Cholestyramine | 2 weeks | - decreased stool frequency of 5.1 stools/day | Low |
| - 2 weeks | Retrospective study that only included people with bile acid malabsorption and infectious gastroenteritis. | ||||||
| - 2–16 g | |||||||
| - QD | |||||||
| Thakur | 76 (17:59) | RCT | Rome II criteria and history of gastroenteritis or dysentery as reported by the patient | -Metronidazole | 7 days | - improvement in pain, stool and total symptom scores at days 7 and 28 | Low |
| Study was not randomized, and both patient and physician were not blinded. 9 patients were lost to follow-up but it is unclear if they were included in analysis. | |||||||
| - 4 weeks | |||||||
| - 400 mg | |||||||
| - TID | |||||||
| - stool symptoms continued to improve between day 7 and 28 even though patients were no longer taking the medication | |||||||
| Lifshitz | 29 (10:19) | RCT | History of chronic diarrhea after an episode of gastroenteritis lasting more than 3 weeks as reported by Pediatric Gastroenterology unit | - Pregestimil | variable | - 9 out of 10 infants had improved clinical symptoms, shorter time to improvement | Moderate |
| - 3 – 7 days | Population was limited to infants with lactose intolerance. Inclusion was based on chronic diarrhea, not on established criteria such as Rome criteria. | ||||||
| - 1500 mL/kg | |||||||
| - Daily to provide 70 kcal/kg |
GRADE summary of findings table
| Paper number | Limitations | Indirectness |
|---|---|---|
| 1 (mesalazine) | AC: not discussed | Population: OK? IBS-D population selected based on ROME criteria but paper does not define how they separated IBS-D patients into post-infective and non-post-infective group. |
| B: not discussed | ||
| FU: 0 pts lost to FU | ||
| OB: not a concern | ||
| L: none | ||
| Intervention: Good. Mesalazine is relevant intervention for our purpose. | ||
| Question whether outcome measure scales were validated (abdominal pain and distention score) | ||
| Outcomes: Good. Outcomes are direct (e.g. abdominal pain, frequency of stool); concern regarding length of follow up (only 30 days) | ||
| Indirect comparison: N/A | ||
| 2 (ondansetron) | AC: randomized; method not discussed | Population: Good. Study population fulfilled ROME II criteria after Giardia infection. |
| B: subjects and clinical investigators were blinded | ||
| Intervention: Ok. Ondansetron is relevant to our study, but the patients were fasted the day before and they were fed a specific meat soup. | ||
| FU: 0 pts lost to FU | ||
| OB: not a concern | ||
| L: none | ||
| Outcome: Good. Direct outcomes such as abdominal pain/discomfort, nausea, fullness and satiety assessed; no information on chronicity; some surrogate measures (gastric emptying, max drinking capacity) | ||
| Indirect comparison: N/A | ||
| 3 (prednisolone) | AC: good “A designated phar- macist generated random sequences in blocks of six, five times.” | population: good, representative; Good. Is it problematic that some patients were recruited based on ROME I after gastroenteritis, and some on clinical diagnosis? |
| B: patients and clinicians blinded; cell count was done blinded | ||
| FU: 5 pts lost to FU; analysis performed to take losses into account | intervention: good; Prednisone is relevant to our study. | |
| OB: not a concern | ||
| outcomes: surrogate measures (number of serotonin-containing enterochromaffin cells, number of lamina propria T cells) are the primary and secondary outcomes. But further direct outcomes were measured (pain, looseness, urgency and frequency) for up to 3 months; pts kept symptom diaries for 6 weeks of study | ||
| L: none | ||
| Indirect comparison: N/A | ||
| 4 (pregestimil) | AC: unclear | population: Ok. Limited study population to infants with lactose intolerance. Cannot be extended to adult population. Diagnosis by chronic diarrhea with gastroenteritis, so not certain if it would fulfill the IBS criteria. |
| B: Good “The local physician handling the patients was not aware of the formula choice.” | ||
| NB: physician decided when and if change in feeding was needed – unblinding? | ||
| intervention: good, but specific to infants | ||
| FU: 0 pts lost to FU | ||
| OB: not a concern | outcomes: good (direct outcome of days to improvement in diarrhea) but no information on longevity of effect. | |
| L: population age, population co-morbidities, outdated? | ||
| Indirect comparison: N/A | ||
| 5 (cholestyramine) | AC: not done (retrospective) | population: Not good. Population mainly screened for bile acid malabsorption (75SeHCAT). Study population is not similar to our patients; some concerns about generalizability |
| B: not blinded | ||
| FU: 7 pts stopped treatment, documented in study, rest of the study deals with only 18 pts who continued/responded | ||
| OB: not a concern | intervention: Not good. Cholestyramine would only be used in people who were diagnosed with bile malabsorption. Patients took cholestyramine in different doses and for different lengths of time. Patients were permitted to also take codeine phosphate and loperamide to alleviate symptoms; but this is not taken into consideration during the analysis. | |
| L: Stopping early for benefit: 6 pts who did not improve were not followed further | ||
| outcomes: OK. Only mentions mean frequency of diarrhea as an outcome relevant to our study. | ||
| Indirect comparison: N/A | ||
| 6 (cholestyramine) | AC: not done (retrospective) | population: Not good. Population mainly screened for bile acid malabsorption (75SeHCAT). Study population is not similar to our patients; some concerns about generalizability |
| B: not done | ||
| FU: 0 pts lost to FU | ||
| OB: not a concern | ||
| L: not a concern | ||
| intervention: Not good. Cholestyramine would only be used in people who were diagnosed with bile malabsorption. The doses of cholestyramine varied between patients. | ||
| outcomes: Ok. Only mentions mean stool frequency as an outcome relevant to our study. | ||
| Data only up to 2 weeks after start of treatment (longevity?) | ||
| Indirect comparison: N/A | ||
| 7 (metronidazole) | AC: not randomized, sorted based on disease type | population: good, representative (determined by ROME II and gastroenteritis). |
| B: pts and clinicians not blinded | ||
| FU: 9 pts lost to FU; unclear if accounted in analysis | intervention: good | |
| outcomes: Good: validated questionnaire that assesses pain, stool frequency, consistency, etc. and patient follow up 3 weeks post study | ||
| OB: validated symptom questionnaire used | ||
| L: | ||
| Indirect comparison: N/A | ||
| 8 (mesalamine) | AC: good | population: good, representative (patients referred with clinical diagnosis of PI-IBS). |
| B: participants and investigators blinded (head pharmacist allocated pts and meds) | ||
| intervention: good | ||
| FU: 3 pts lost to FU; were accounted for in analysis | ||
| outcomes: Good: outcome measures of global improvements, mean change in symptoms, and quality of life. | ||
| OB: no concerns (validated measures, clearly states primary and secondary outcome measures) | ||
| L: | Indirect comparison: N/A | |
| 9 (mesalazine) | AC: not discussed | population: Good: patients diagnosed with ROME II criteria after gastroenteritis. |
| B: not discussed | ||
| FU: 2 pts withdrew due to AE | intervention: Good: mesalazine is relevant to our study. | |
| OB: not a concern | ||
| L: outcomes measured not clearly stated; “weekly symptom score/global improvement” used to measure outcomes, unsure of validity | ||
| outcomes: Ok. weekly Symptom scores and global improvement at the end of treatment measured, but do not describe what they are. | ||
| Indirect comparison: N/A |