| Literature DB >> 30157897 |
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
The primary purpose of these practical guidelines related to Kawasaki disease (KD) is to contribute to prompt diagnosis and appropriate treatment on the basis of different specialists' contributions in the field. A set of 40 recommendations is provided, divided in two parts: the first describes the definition of KD, its epidemiology, etiopathogenetic hints, presentation, clinical course and general management, including treatment of the acute phase, through specific 23 recommendations.Their application is aimed at improving the rate of treatment with intravenous immunoglobulin and the overall potential development of coronary artery abnormalities in KD. Guidelines, however, should not be considered a norm that limits 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 complications.Entities:
Keywords: Aspirin; Children; Coronary artery abnormalities; Intravenous immunoglobulin; Kawasaki disease
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30157897 PMCID: PMC6116535 DOI: 10.1186/s13052-018-0536-3
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 |
Classification (grade) based on effectiveness, defined as follows
| grade A highly recommended |
Incidence rates of Kawasaki disease in Asia, Europe, and North-America
| Region | Period | Incidencea | Source of data | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Asia | ||||
| Japan | 2011–2012 | 243.1–264.8 | National survey | Makino et al. 2015 [ |
| Japan | 2007–2008 | 215.3–218.6 | National survey | Nakamura et al. 2010 [ |
| Korea | 2009–2011 | 115.4–134.4 | National survey | Kim et al. 2014 [ |
| Corea | 2006–2008 | 113.1 | National survey | Park et al. 2011 [ |
| Taiwan | 2003–2006 | 69.0 | National Health System database | Huang et al. 2009 [ |
| China | ||||
| -Bejing | 2004 | 55.1 | Beijing’s Hospitals survey | Du et al. 2007 [ |
| -Shanghai | 2007 | 53.3 | Pediatric ward survey | Ma et al. 2010 [ |
| -Hong Kong | 1997–2000 | 39.0 | Retrospective and perspective analysis | Ng et al. 2005 [ |
| - Sichuan | 2001 | 9.81 | Hospital survey | Li et al. 2008 [ |
| India | 2007 | 4.5 | Retrospective analysis in Chandigarh, Northern India | Singh et al. 2011 [ |
| Thailand | 2002 | 3.4 | KD National Register | Durongpisitkul et al. 2006 [ |
| North America | ||||
| Hawaii | 1996–2006 | 50.4 | Hawaii State Inpatient Database | Holman et al. 2010 [ |
| Canada | 2004–2006 | 26.2 | Clinical records’ Review in Ontario | Lin et al. 2010 [ |
| South America | ||||
| Chile | 2001–2007 | 6.8 | National survey | Borzutzky et al. 2012 [ |
| Australia | ||||
| Western Australia | 1980–1989 | 2.82 | ICD-9 review in Referral Hospital | Saundankar et al. 2014 [ |
| 1990–1999 | 7.96 | |||
| 2000–2009 | 9.34 | |||
| Middle- East | ||||
| Israel | 1996–2009 | 6.4 | National Health System database | Bar-Meir, 2011 [ |
| Europe | ||||
| United Kingdom | 1998–2003 | 8.4 | Hospitals’ data | Harnden et al. 2009 [ |
| Ireland | 1996–2000 | 15.2 | Ireland’s Hospital In-Patient Enquiry database | Lynch et al. 2003 [ |
| Finland | 1992 | 7.2 | Recovery register | Salo et al. 1993 [ |
| Denmark | 1999–2004 | 4.9 | Danish National Hospital Register | Fischer et al. 2007 [ |
| Sweden | 1990–1992 | 6.2 | Clinical records | Schiller et al. 1995 [ |
| France | 2005–2006 | 9.0 | Perspective survey in pediatric ward of Northen France | Heuclin et al. 2009 [ |
| Italy | 1981–1982 | 14.7 | Clinical records’ Review and families’interview in Northen Italy | Tamburlini et al. 1984 [ |
aIncidence rates are reported per 100,000 children < 5 years of age, with exclusion of India, for which they are reported per 100,000 children < 15 years of age
Clinical phases of Kawasaki disease
| Acute phase (first and second week): | |
| Subacute phase (third and fourth week): | |
| Convalescence phase (fifth to eighth week): |
List of illnesses entering in differential diagnosis with Kawasaki disease
| Infectious illnesses | Non-infectious illnesses |
|---|---|
| . viral (rubella, adenovirus, enterovirus, cytomegalovirus, Epstein-Barr virus, parvovirus B19, human herpesvirus 6) | . drug hypersensitivity reaction |
Classification of coronary artery aneurysms in the acute phase of Kawasaki disease and severity classification
| Dilation: diameter ≥ 2.5 SD | |
| Small aneurysm: | |
| Medium aneurysm: | |
| Giant aneurysm: |
Severity classification of coronary artery aneurysms in Kawasaki disease
| I. No coronary dilatation: patients with no coronary dilatation including those in the acute phase | |
| II. Transient coronary dilatation during the acute phase: patients with slight and transient coronary dilatation which typically subsides within 30 days after onset | |
| III. Regression: patients who still exhibit coronary aneurysms meeting the criteria for dilatation or more severe change on day 30 after onset, despite complete disappearance of changes in the bilateral coronary artery systems during the first year after onset, and who do not meet the criteria for Group V | |
| IV. Remaining coronary aneurysm: patients in whom unilateral or bilateral coronary aneurysms are detected by coronary angiography in the second year or later and who do not meet the criteria for Group V | |
| V. Coronary stenotic lesions: patients with coronary stenotic lesions detectable by coronary angiography | |
| (a) Patients without ischemic findings: patients without ischemic signs/symptoms detectable by laboratory tests or other examinations | |
| (b) Patients with ischemic findings: patients with ischemic signs/symptoms detectable by laboratory tests or other examinations |
Main laboratory abnormalities in patients with Kawasaki disease
| BLOOD CELL COUNT | |
| white blood cells | ↑, maximal elevation of polymorphonuclear cells |
| red blood cells | ↓, normal mean corpuscular volume |
| platelets | ↑, typically in the II and III week, normalization in 4–8 weeks |
| INFLAMMATORY PARAMETERS | |
| erythro-sedimentation rate (ESR) | ↑, slow normalization |
| C-reactive protein (CRP) | ↑, fast normalization |
| LIVER FUNCTION TESTS | |
| transaminases | ↑ |
| bilirubinemia | ↑ |
| gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase | ↑ |
| albuminemia | more severe and prolonged illness if ↓ |
| OTHER LABORATORY TESTS | |
| urine | white blood cells > 10/high field powered |
| cerebrospinal fluid | aseptic meningitis (presence of mononuclear cells, normal glucose/proteins) |
| synovial fluid | purulent-appearing fluid, white blood cells 125.000–300.000/mm3, normal glucose level |