| Literature DB >> 30157893 |
Alessandra Marchesi1, Isabella Tarissi de Jacobis2, Donato Rigante3, Alessandro Rimini4, Walter Malorni5, Giovanni Corsello6, Grazia Bossi7, Sabrina Buonuomo2, Fabio Cardinale8, Elisabetta Cortis9, Fabrizio De Benedetti2, Andrea De Zorzi2, Marzia Duse10, Domenico Del Principe11, Rosa Maria Dellepiane12, Livio D'Isanto13, Maya El Hachem2, Susanna Esposito14, Fernanda Falcini15, Ugo Giordano2, Maria Cristina Maggio6, Savina Mannarino7, Gianluigi Marseglia7, Silvana Martino16, Giulia Marucci2, Rossella Massaro17, Christian Pescosolido17, Donatella Pietraforte5, Maria Cristina Pietrogrande12, Patrizia Salice12, Aurelio Secinaro2, Elisabetta Straface5, Alberto Villani2.
Abstract
This second part of practical Guidelines related to Kawasaki disease (KD) has the goal of contributing to prompt diagnosis and most appropriate treatment of KD resistant forms and cardiovascular complications, including non-pharmacologic treatments, follow-up, lifestyle and prevention of cardiovascular risks in the long-term through a set of 17 recommendations.Guidelines, however, should not be considered a norm that limits the treatment options of pediatricians and practitioners, as treatment modalities other than those recommended may be required as a result of peculiar medical circumstances, patient's condition, and disease severity or individual complications.Entities:
Keywords: Aspirin; Child; Coronary artery abnormalities; Innovative biotechnologies; Intravenous immunoglobulin; Kawasaki disease; Personalized medicine
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30157893 PMCID: PMC6116479 DOI: 10.1186/s13052-018-0529-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ital J Pediatr ISSN: 1720-8424 Impact factor: 2.638
Level (class) based on study design, defined as follows
| class I | meta-analyses or systematic reviews from randomized controlled trials |
| class II | single randomized controlled trials |
| class III | nonrandomized controlled trials |
| class IV | retrospective case-control studies |
| class V | number of cases without control group |
| class VI | opinions of committees of experts and authorities |
Classification (grade) based on effectiveness, defined as follows
| grade A | highly recommended |
| grade B | recommended |
| grade C | recommended, but evidence is uncertain |
| grade D | non recommended |
| grade E | contraindicated |
Classification of coronary artery abnormalities in the acute phase of Kawasaki disease and severity classification
| No coronary artery involvement: z-score < 2 | |
| Dilation of the coronary artery: z-score > 2 to < 2.5 SD | |
| Small aneurysm of the coronary artery: z-score ≥ 2.5 to < 5 SD | |
| Medium aneurysm of the coronary artery: z-score ≥ 5 to < 10 SD | |
| Giant aneurysm of the coronary artery: z-score ≥ 10 SD |
Other drugs used in the drug-resistant Kawasaki disease
| Ulinastatin [ | Cyclosporine A [ | Methotrexate [ | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mechanism of action | Inhibitor of human trypsin | Inhibition of calcineurin and increased activity of T cells | Folic acid antagonist, suppression of lymphoproliferation |
| Indications | Patients resistant to IVIG | Patients resistant to IVIG | Patients resistant to IVIG |
| Dosage | Optimal dosing in not yet determined in children, though in many studies | 4 mg/kg/day in 2 doses per os; in case of persistence of fever the dosage can be increased to 5–8 mg/kg/day; administered until CRP normalization or for 10–14 days | 10 mg/m2/week per os, administered until fever disappears |
| Side effects | Anaphylactic shock, liver dysfunction, leukopenia, rash, itching, diarrhea, pain at the injection site | Hypercalcemia, hypomagnesemia, hirsutism, hypertension | Gastrointestinal signs, alopecia, risk of myelosuppression, anaphylaxis, infections, liver dysfunction, acute kidney failure |
| Level of evidence | Class III, grade C | Class V, grade C | Class V, grade C |
Fig. 1Treatment of low-risk KD patients
Fig. 2Treatment of high-risk KD patients
Anticoagulant drugs used in Kawasaki disease
| Warfarin | Non-fractionated heparin | Low molecular weight heparin (LMWH) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mechanism of action | Block of synthesis of vitamin K-dependent coagulation factors (II, VII, IX and X) | Bond with AT-III and inhibition of II, VII, IX, X, XI, XII coagulation factors | Bond with AT-III and inhibition of II, VII, IX, X, XI, XII coagulation factors |
| Therapeutic indications | Medium to giant aneurysms, history of heart attack, history of intra-aneurysm thrombosis | Aneurysms with high thrombotic risk, before starting therapy with warfarin | Same as non-fractioned heparin |
| Dosage | Initial dose of 0.05–0.12 mg/kg/day, progressively increased over 4–5 days to obtain an INR between 2.0 and 2.5 | Initial intravenous dose: 50 U/kg in 10 min or more, followed by 20–25 U/kg/hour to maintain aPTT between 60 and 85″ | |
| Side effects | Bleeding (epistaxis, gum bleeding, intracranial and intra-abdominal hemorrhage), embryopathies (dysostosis, dyschondroplasia, microcephaly) | Hemorrhage, thrombocytopenia, hepatic dysfunction, rash, diarrhea, hair loss, osteoporosis | Same as non-fractionated heparin, but less osteoporosis |
| Interactions | Reduced efficacy with chlorophyll contained in green and yellow vegetables (with high contents of vitamin K), vitamin K-enriched milk, phenobarbital, carbamazepine, rifampicin; increased efficacy if breastfeeding, use of erythromycin, fluconazole, corticosteroids, amiodarone | None | None |
Long-term therapy for patients with coronary artery aneurysms related to Kawasaki disease and anginal symptoms
| Patients without anginal symptoms: | |
| - | |
| Patients with anginal symptoms: | |
| In addition to antiplatelet drugs: | |
| - |
Cardiovascular risk classes in patients with Kawasaki disease
| Class I | No abnormality of coronary arteries in the various phases of the disease |
| Class II | Transient coronary artery ectasia that disappears within 8 weeks |
| Class III | Single aneurysm of small-medium caliber between + 3 and + 7 SD in one or more arteries |
| Class IV | One or more aneurysms ≥7 SD, including multiple and complex giant aneurysms without any obstruction |
| Class V | Coronary artery obstruction at the angiography |
Sport classification according to the American Academy of Pediatrics
| Contact/collision | Boxing, field hockey, ice hockey |
| American football | |
| Motorcycle racing | |
| Martial arts, rodeo, soccer, wrestling | |
| Limited contact | Baseball, basketball, bicycling, diving |
| Field events (high jump, pole vault) | |
| Gymnastics, horse-back riding | |
| Ice roller skating | |
| Canoeing, fencing | |
| Running, swimming, tennis | |
| Race walking, weight lifting | |
| Non-contact Highly strenuous | Skiing (cross-country, downhill, water) |
| Softball | |
| Squash, team handball | |
| Volleyball | |
| Non-contact Mildly strenuous | Badminton |
| Curling | |
| Table tennis | |
| Non-contact Non strenuous | Archery |
| Golf | |
| Rifle range |