| Literature DB >> 29290883 |
Anna Catherine Elliott1, Graham R Williamson2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Many randomised control trials and systematic reviews have examined the benefits of glucocorticoids for the treatment of croup in children, but they have reported mainly on dexamethasone as an oral treatment for croup. No systematic reviews have examined prednisolone alone. AIM: To determine in a systematic review of the literature whether a single dose of oral prednisolone is as effective as a single dose of dexamethasone for reducing croup symptoms in children. SEARCH STRATEGY: A detailed search was conducted on the following databases: CINAHL, MEDLINE EBSCO, MEDLINE, OVID, PubMed, The Cochrane Library, ProQuest, EMBASE, JBI, Sum search, and OpenGrey. Study authors were contacted. SELECTION CRITERIA: Randomised Controlled Trials, clinical trials or chart reviews which examined children with croup who were treated with prednisolone alone, or when prednisolone was compared to a dexamethasone treatment and the effectiveness of the intervention was objectively measured using croup scores and re-attendance as primary outcomes. DATA COLLECTION AND ANALYSIS: Following PRISMA guidelines for systematic reviews, relevant studies were identified. Scores were graded agreed by two independent reviewers using QualSyst. MAINEntities:
Keywords: Corticosteroids; Croup; Dexamethasone; Prednisolone; QualSyst; Systematic review
Year: 2017 PMID: 29290883 PMCID: PMC5738747 DOI: 10.2174/1874434601711010241
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Open Nurs J ISSN: 1874-4346
PICO employed in this systematic review.
| How would I describe a group of patients similar to mine? | ||
| Which main intervention, prognostic factor, or exposure am I considering? | ||
| What is the main alternative to compare with the intervention? | ||
| What can I hope to accomplish, measure, improve, or affect? |
Relative heterogeneity of the included studies.
| Author | Patient Group and Age | Study Design | Outcomes | Key Results | Study Weaknesses |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| [ | Children aged 3 months to 142 months old presenting to a single emergency department with mild to moderate croup. | Primary outcome was the magnitude and rate of reduction in Westley croup score. | Included patients up to the age of 12 years, although very uncommon for older children to be affected. | ||
| [ | Children 6 months to 6 years presenting to a single emergency department with mild or moderate croup | Primary outcome measures were the magnitude and rate of reduction in Westley croup score, rate of return for medical care with ongoing croup, and further treatment with steroids in the week following index presentation. Secondary outcome measures were the proportion of subjects requiring admission or salvage therapy, such as nebulized adrenaline, during index presentation. | Small sample size. Large number of eligible patients not recruited. Primary outcome over short time period. | ||
| [ | Children aged 1-8 years presenting to primary care offices with mild or moderate croup in the USA. | Additional health care within 11 days of randomization | No difference in outcomes of either group for child or parent. | Small numbers. | |
| [ | Children aged 4 months to 11 years, median age 2 years presenting in an emergency department with mild or moderate croup | Retrospective chart review. | How long stridor at rest persisted after administration of prednisolone 1mg /kg. | Average length of time from SAR to cessation was 6.5 hours. | Retrospective chart reviews rely on completeness of contemporaneous data entry. Inter rater reliability reported as moderate. Lack of power calculation |