| Literature DB >> 29632801 |
Hirotaka Nakashima1,2, Kazuhisa Watanabe3, Hiroyuki Umegaki3, Yusuke Suzuki1,2, Masafumi Kuzuya3,4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Pneumonia is a very common disease, especially among the elderly. Various drugs' preventive effects against pneumonia have been reported. The antiplatelet drug cilostazol is used to prevent pneumonia, but the robustness of its efficacy is unclear. This review estimates the effectiveness of cilostazol for preventing pneumonia in elderly individuals.Entities:
Keywords: Antiplatelet; Cilostazol; Elderly; Pneumonia; Swallowing function
Year: 2018 PMID: 29632801 PMCID: PMC5885313 DOI: 10.1186/s41479-018-0046-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pneumonia (Nathan) ISSN: 2200-6133
Fig. 1Flow of studies through the review
Summary of the two included studies
| Study and country | Yamaya et al. 2001 [ | Shinohara et al. 2006 [ |
|---|---|---|
| Population | History of cerebral infarction but not bedridden | History of cerebral infarction, age < 80 years |
| Mean age | Mean age: 76.5 ± 2.1 years | Mean age: 65.0 ± 8.7 years |
| Gender | No statement about gender | Female 34.4% |
| Risk factors | No statement about risk factors for pneumonia | No statement about risk factors for pneumonia |
| Criteria for diagnosis of pneumonia | New pulmonary infiltrate seen on chest radiographs (assessed by two radiologists not involved in the study) and one of the following: cough, body temperature > 37.8 °C, subjective dyspnea | Description by attending physician in the medical chart, chest radiographs and blood test |
| Intervention and control (n, allocated) | I: cilostazol 100 mg per day (n: not stated) | I: cilostazol 200 mg per day (n: 547) |
| C: no active treatment (n: not stated) | C: placebo (n: 548) | |
| 328 patients were allocated in total but the number of patients in each group at allocation was not reported | ||
| Intervention period | 3 years | 3.3 years on average |
| Number of patients analyzed | ||
| Outcomes | Pneumonia | Pneumonia |
| I: 12 (9.6%), C: 35 (24.1%) | I: 3 (0.56%), C: 15 (2.8%) | |
| RR = 0.40 (95% CI 0.22–0.73)** | RR = 0.20 (95% CI 0.06–0.69)** | |
| Cerebral infarction | Cerebral infarction [ | |
| I: 9 (7.2%), C: 24 (16.6%) | I: 30 (5.6%), C: 57 (10.7%) | |
| RR = 0.43 (95% CI 0.21–0.90)* | RR = 0.53 (95% CI 0.34–0.81)* | |
| Bleeding | Bleeding [ | |
| I: 12 (9.6%), severity of the bleeding events was not reported | Fatal intracranial hemorrhage | |
| C: No statement about adverse events | I: 0, C: 1 | |
| Nonfatal intracranial hemorrhage | ||
| I: 4 (0.75%), C: 6 (1.1%) | ||
| Other bleeding | ||
| I: 15a (2.8%), C: 11 (2.1%) | ||
| Risk of bias | ||
| Random sequence generation | Low | Low |
| Allocation concealment | Unclear: Inadequate description | Low |
| Blinding of participants and personnel | High: Open-label trial | Low |
| Blinding of outcome assessment | Low | Unclear: Post-hoc analysis of a RCT [ |
| Incomplete outcome data | High: As-treated analysis | Unclear: Reasons for dropouts were unclear |
| Selective reporting | High: No protocol available, No statement about adverse events in the control group | High: Post-hoc analysis of a RCT [ |
| Other bias | Unclear: No statement about funding | Unclear: No statement about funding but original RCT [ |
| Comments | Reported in a Letter to the Editor | 1095 patients were randomized but 31 patients were excluded from analysis because of “serious protocol violations” |
| 328 patients were randomized but 58 patients were excluded from analysis; 31 patients died from causes other than pneumonia; additionally, 27 patients in cilostazol group dropped out because of adverse events | Of 1064 patients, about half of the patients discontinued the treatment (I: 54%, C: 49%) | |
C control, CI confidence interval, I intervention, RR risk ratio
*P < 0.05, **P < 0.01
a Including one gastrointestinal bleeding
Fig. 2Risk of pneumonia and cerebral infarction with cilostazol treatment compared with no antiplatelet. A meta-analysis was not performed because of the small number of trials. Yamaya et al. (2001) [16] compared cilostazol with no active treatment without placebo. Shinohara et al. (2006) [10] compared cilostazol with placebo
Fig. 3Risk of adverse events with cilostazol treatment compared with placebo. Only one trial (Shinohara et al. 2006) was included in this figure because the other (Yamaya et al. 2001) did not describe adverse events in the control group