| Literature DB >> 30076469 |
B U K Li1,2,3.
Abstract
Cyclic vomiting syndrome (CVS) in children is characterized by frequent hospitalizations, multiple comorbidities, and poor quality of life. In the absence of robust data, the treatment of CVS remains largely empiric starting with the 2008 NASPGHAN Consensus Statement recommendations of cyproheptadine for children < 5 years of age and amitriptyline for those ≥ 5 years with propranolol serving as the second-line agent. Comprehensive management begins with lifestyle alterations, and extends to medications, supplements, and stress reduction therapies. Standard drug therapy is organized by the four phases of the illness: (1) interictal (preventative medications and mitochondrial supplements), (2) prodromal (abortive agents), (3) vomiting (fluids/energy substrates, antiemetics, analgesics, and sedatives) and (4) recovery (supportive care and nutrition). Because the response to treatment is heterogeneous, clinicians often trial several different preventative strategies including NK1 antagonists, cautious titration of amitriptyline to higher doses, anticonvulsants, Ca2+-channel blockers, and other TCA antidepressants. When the child remains refractory to treatment, reconsideration of possible missed diagnoses and further mono- or combination therapy and psychotherapy can be guided by accompanying comorbidities (especially anxiety), specific subphenotype, and when available, genotype. For hospital intervention, IV fluids with 10% dextrose, antiemetics, and analgesics can lessen symptoms while effective sedation in some instances can truncate severe episodes.Entities:
Keywords: Abdominal migraine; Cyclic vomiting syndrome; Postural orthostatic tachycardia syndrome
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30076469 PMCID: PMC6153591 DOI: 10.1007/s00431-018-3218-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Pediatr ISSN: 0340-6199 Impact factor: 3.183
Classes of prophylactic, abortive, and supportive medications
| Class | Agent | Goal | Dosing | Key side effect |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Antimigraine | Cyproheptadine | Preventative | 0.25–0.5 mg/kg/day divided b.i.d or q.hs | Increased appetite, tiredness |
| Pizotifen | Preventative | 0.25 mg b.i.d.-t.i.d. | Increased appetite, tiredness | |
| Amitriptyline | Preventative | Titrate to 1.0–1.5 mg/kg/q.hs. | Constipation, sedation, QT prolongation | |
| Propranolol | Preventative | 0.5–1.0 mg/kg/day divided b.i.d. or t.i.d. | Hypotension, fatigue | |
| Flunarizine | Preventative | 5 mg q.d. | Hypotension | |
| Mirtazapine | Preventative | 7.5–15 mg q.h. | Increased appetite, tiredness | |
| Sumatriptan | Abortive | 6 mg nasal during prodrome | Neck/chest burning | |
| Anticonvulsant | Topiramate | Preventative | 2 mg/kg/day divided b.i.d. | Cognitive dysfunction |
| Phenobarbital | Preventative | 2–3 mg/kg/q.hs. | Cognitive dysfunction | |
| Levitaracetam | Preventative | 1000 mg/day in adults | Cognitive dysfunction | |
| Zonisamide | Preventative | 400 mg/day in adults | Cognitive dysfunction | |
| Antiemetics | Ondansetron | Supportive | 0.3–0.4 mg/kg/dose ≤ 16 mg q. 6 h | QT prolongation |
| Aprepitant | Preventative | Twice weekly: < 40 kg: 40 mg | Fatigue, diarrhea | |
| Abortive | 30 min before vomiting, day 2 and 3: < 15 kg: 80, 40, 40 mg | |||
| Prokinetics | Erythromycin | Preventative | 20 mg/kg/day divided q.i.d. | Abdominal cramps |
| Metoclopramide | Supportive | 0.1 mg/kg/dose q. 6 h | Irritability, dystonic reaction | |
| Sedatives | Diphenhydramine | Supportive | 1.25 mg/kg/dose q. 6 h | |
| Lorazepam | Supportive | 0.05–0.1 mg/kg/dose q. 4–6 h | Respiratory depression | |
| Chlorpromazine + diphenhydramine | Supportive | 0.5–1.0 mg/kg q. 8 h | Dystonic reaction | |
| Analgesics | Ketorolac | Supportive | 0.5–1.0 mg/kg/dose ≤ 10 mg q. 8 h | GI bleeding |
| Supplements | Coenzyme Q10 | Preventative | 10 mg/kg/day divided b.i.d. | |
| Preventative | 50–100 mg/kg/day divided b.i.d. | Diarrhea, fishy odor | ||
| Riboflavin | Preventative | 10 mg/kg/day divided b.i.d. |
Management by disease severity
| Therapy: mild disease | Therapy: moderate-severe disease | Therapy: refractory disease | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Lifestyle measures | 1. Trigger avoidance | Same + | Same + identify specific triggers: stress (bullying), physical (chronic sinusitis), toxic (cannabis use) |
| Abortive | 1. Sumatriptan nasal/subcutaneous | 1. Aprepitant PO | 1. Aprepitant PO |
| Prophylactic | Optional—if poor response to abortive therapy | < 5 years: | 1. Aprepitant PO |
Mild disease = no emergency visits or hospital admits; < 6 episodes/year and < 24 h duration. Moderate-Severe disease = occasional-frequent emergency visits and/or hospital admits; ≥ 6 episodes/year and ≥ 24 h. Refractory disease = episodes unchanged/worsening on therapy or missing > 4 weeks of school
Treatment by clinical paradigm
| By comorbidity | |
|---|---|
| Anxiety | Cognitive behavioral therapy, anxiolytics |
| POTS | Above maintenance fluids, supplemental NaCl, propranolol, exercise |
| Sleep deprivation | Sleep hygiene, melatonin 3–10 mg q.h. |
| Fatigue/limited stamina | Coenzyme Q10 10 mg/kg divided b.i.d. into 200–300 mg b.i.d. |
| – | |
| By subgroup | |
| Migraine-related | Antimigraine agents including triptans |
| Sato variant | Amitriptyline, short-acting ACE-inhibitors/β-blockers for acute hypertension |
| Mitochondrial dysfunction | Amitriptyline + coenzyme Q10 (± |
| Catamenial | Low-estrogen birth control pills (90 day) or depo-medroxyprogesterone |
| By genotype | |
| RYR2 mutation | Propranolol |
|
| |
|
|