| Literature DB >> 30473868 |
Wesley Jackson1, Genevieve Taylor1, David Selewski2, P Brian Smith3, Sue Tolleson-Rinehart1,4, Matthew M Laughon1.
Abstract
Furosemide is a potent loop diuretic commonly and variably used by neonatologists to improve oxygenation and lung compliance in premature infants. There are several safety concerns with use of furosemide in premature infants, specifically the risk of sensorineural hearing loss (SNHL), and nephrocalcinosis/nephrolithiasis (NC/NL). We conducted a systematic review of all trials and observational studies examining the association between these outcomes with exposure to furosemide in premature infants. We searched MEDLINE, EMBASE, CINAHL, and clinicaltrials.gov. We included studies reporting either SNHL or NC/NL in premature infants (< 37 weeks completed gestational age) who received at least one dose of enteral or intravenous furosemide. Thirty-two studies met full inclusion criteria for the review, including 12 studies examining SNHL and 20 studies examining NC/NL. Only one randomized controlled trial was identified in this review. We found no evidence that furosemide exposure increases the risk of SNHL or NC/NL in premature infants, with varying quality of studies and found the strength of evidence for both outcomes to be low. The most common limitation in these studies was the lack of control for confounding factors. The evidence for the risk of SNHL and NC/NL in premature infants exposed to furosemide is low. Further randomized controlled trials of furosemide in premature infants are urgently needed to adequately assess the risk of SNHL and NC/NL, provide evidence for improved FDA labeling, and promote safer prescribing practices.Entities:
Keywords: Furosemide; Infant; Nephrocalcinosis; Nephrolithiasis; Premature; Sensorineural hearing loss
Year: 2018 PMID: 30473868 PMCID: PMC6240934 DOI: 10.1186/s40748-018-0092-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Matern Health Neonatol Perinatol ISSN: 2054-958X
Eligibility Criteria
| Patient/Population | Infant < 37 weeks completed gestational age |
| Intervention | ≥1 dose of furosemide (IV or PO) during hospitalization in the neonatal intensive care unit |
| Control | Infant < 37 weeks completed gestational age without exposure to furosemide |
| Outcomes | sensorineural hearing loss; nephrocalcinosis/nephrolithiasis |
| Study Design | clinical trials, retrospective or prospective cohort studies, case-control studies |
Fig. 1PRISMA flow diagram for inclusion and exclusion of studies [71]
Summary of studies examining risk of hearing loss in premature infants
| Study (Year) | Design | Population and Sample Size | Outcome Measure | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mjoen (1982) [ | cohort | 60 high-risk infants 27–44 weeks GA | ABR testing in NICU and follow-up visits | • 4 infants with evidence of SNHL. |
| McCann (1985) [ | randomized controlled | 17 premature infants with BPD (7 infants received furosemide and 10 infants received placebo) | Audiology screen at discharge and follow-up visits | • Normal hearing in all infants. |
| Salamy (1989) [ | cohort | GA 24–34 weeks | ABR in NICU and follow-up; behavioral audiometry from 3 months to 4 years | • Infants with SNHL received greater amounts of furosemide for longer durations, in combination with aminoglycoside or vancomycin therapy ( |
| Brown (1991) [ | case-control | 35 infants with SNHL and 70 matched hearing-intact controls | BAER testing prior to discharge from NICU | • 17/35 (49%) infants with SNHL and 6/70 (9%) controls were exposed to furosemide ( |
| Borradori (1997) [ | case-control | 8 children with progressive bilateral deafness born preterm (GA ≤ 34 weeks) with 16 controls matched on GA and BW and 15 controls matched on perinatal complications | ABR at NICU discharge and follow-up | • 8/8 (100%) infants with SNHL and 13/15 (87%) controls received furosemide (NS). |
| Ertl (2001) [ | case-control | 22 premature infants with SNHL and 25 controls matched on GA, BW, and perinatal factors associated with hearing loss | OAE test and ABR if failed OAE | • 4/22 (18%) infants with SNHL and 1/25 (4%) controls received furosemide (p < 0.01). |
| Rais-Bahrami (2004) [ | cohort | 57 infants who received furosemide and 207 infants who did not receive furosemide | OAE, ABR, or both prior to NICU discharge | • No difference in abnormal hearing screen in furosemide and non-furosemide groups (16% vs. 16%; |
| Xoinis (2007) [ | case-control | 71 infants with SNHL, 24 with auditory neuropathy,and 95 controls matched on GA, BW, and birth year | ABR and OAE | • Higher exposure to furosemide in SNHL group (51%) and AN group (96%) compared to control group (32.6%) ( |
| Coenraad (2011) [ | case-control | 9 infants with hearing loss and 36 controls matched on GA, gender, and birth year | ABR screening prior to NICU discharge and repeat ABR and OAE at follow-up visit for failed screening. | • No differences in furosemide exposure between groups (44% vs. 25%; |
| Martinez-Cruz (2012) [ | case-control | 6 children with SNHL and 87 normal-hearing controls with birth weights < 750 g | BAER screening and OAE at follow-up visits for failed initial screening | • 6/6 (100%) infants with SNHL and 45/87 (52%) control infants received furosemide ( |
| Rastogi (2013) [ | cohort | Infants with BW < 1500 g. | ABR prior to NICU discharge; Follow-up at 2 years for failed screening to determine hearing status | • No association with furosemide and hearing loss when adjusting for BW, GA, and other perinatal risk factors (OR 1.18; |
| Wang (2017) [ | cohort | Included all infants with BW ≤ 1500 g. 297 infants with normal hearing and 12 infants with hearing loss | OAE before discharge and BAER at 3 months corrected age if failed initial screen | • Exposure to ototoxins (furosemide and/or gentamicin) was associated with hearing loss (OR 3.62; 95% CI 1.67–7.82). |
Legend: GA Gestational Age, ABR Auditory brainstem response, BPD Bronchopulmonary dysplasia, SNHL Sensorineural hearing loss, BAER Brainstem auditory evoked response, NICU Neonatal Intensive Care Unit, BW Birthweight, NS Non-significant, OAE Otoacoustic emission, AN Auditory neuropathy, ANSD Auditory neuropathy spectrum disorder, OR Odds ratio, CI Confidence Interval
Quality assessment of observational studies examining risk of hearing loss in premature infants
| Study (Year) | Risk of Bias (Low, Moderate, Serious, Critical, No Information) | Comments |
|---|---|---|
| Mjoen (1982) [ | Critical | Critical risk of bias in classification of interventions domain: ototoxic medications grouped as one variable (i.e., furosemide not identified as a single risk factor). |
| Salamy (1989) [ | Moderate | Confounding well-accounted for by assessing “neonatal status” based on duration of hospitalization, days of assisted ventilation, radiography and lab results, etc. |
| Brown (1991) [ | Serious | Serious risk of bias in confounding domain: Selection of variables included in the multivariate analyses based solely on results of univariate analyses and did not adequately account for severity of illness in each group. |
| Borradori (1997) [ | Moderate | Confounding well-accounted for by the creation of two control groups based on BW/GA and perinatal complications related to risk of ototoxicity. |
| Ertl (2001) [ | Serious | Serious risk of bias in confounding domain: infants not matched on severity of illness or co-morbidities associated with hearing loss. |
| Rais-Bahrami (2004) [ | Serious | Serious risk of bias in confounding domain: no adjustment for perinatal factors related to hearing loss. |
| Xoinis (2007) [ | Serious | Serious risk of bias in confounding domain: infants not matched on severity of illness or co-morbidities associated with hearing loss. |
| Coenraad (2011) [ | Serious | Serious risk of bias in confounding domain: infants not matched on severity of illness or co-morbidities associated with hearing loss. |
| Martinez-Cruz (2012) [ | Serious | Serious risk of bias in confounding domain: infants not matched on severity of illness or co-morbidities associated with hearing loss. |
| Rastogi (2013) [ | Moderate | Confounding well-accounted for in multivariate analyses, which adjusted for GA, BW, and other known perinatal risk factors for hearing loss. |
| Wang (2017) [ | Critical | Critical risk of bias in classification of interventions domain: ototoxic medications grouped as one variable (i.e., furosemide not identified as a single risk factor). |
Legend: BW Birth weight, GA Gestational age
Risk of bias in trials examining risk of hearing loss in premature infants
| Study (Year) | Risk of Bias (High, Low, Unclear) | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Random Sequence Generation | Allocation Concealment | Blinding of Participants and Personnel | Blinding of Outcome Assessment | Incomplete Outcome Data | Selective Reporting | Other Bias | |
| McCann (1985) [ | Low | Low | Low | Low | High | Unclear | Low |
Summary of studies examining risk of nephrocalcinosis/nephrolithiasis (NC/NL) in premature infants
| Study (Year) | Design | Population and Sample Size | Outcome Measure | Results Summary |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hufnagle (1982) [ | cohort | 10 premature infants with NC | RUS during NICU admission | • All infants received furosemide of at least 2 mg/kg/day for at least 12 days prior to NC. |
| Woolfield (1988) [ | cohort | 36 infants with BW ≤ 1500 g | RUS at 12 months of age | • 3/32 (9%) infants had NC on RUS and had received chronic furosemide with doses ranging from 2 to 8 mg/kg/day. |
| Jacinto (1988) [ | cohort | 31 infants with BW < 1500 g | RUS in third week of life and every 3 week thereafter until NICU discharge | • NC was diagnosed in 20/31 (64%) of infants. |
| Ezzedeen (1988) [ | cohort | 17 premature infants with NC treated with furosemide; 3 premature infants treated with furosemide without NC (control group) | RUS during NICU admission | • No difference in average daily dose or duration of furosemide in NC group compared to control group. |
| Short (1991) [ | cohort | 79 infants with GA < 32 weeks | Serial RUS | • 21/79 (27%) of infants diagnosed with NC. |
| Downing (1991) [ | cohort | 117 infants with BW < 1750 g and BPD treated with furosemide | RUS prior to discharge and in 3–6 month intervals for positive findings of NC/NL | • 20/117 (17%) had evidence of NC/NL on RUS prior to discharge. |
| Downing (1992) [ | cohort | 27 infants with BW < 1500 g enrolled into 3 groups: 1) not exposed to furosemide ( | RUS and laboratory testing for glomerular and tubular kidney function | • Infants in group 3 had lower creatinine clearance (reduced glomerular function) and higher tubular dysfunction compared to infants in group 1 and 2. |
| Stafstrom (1992) [ | cohort | 11 premature infants with post-hemorrhagic hydrocephalus treated with furosemide and acetazolamide | Serial RUS | • 5/11 (45%) infants with evidence of NC. |
| Pope (1996) [ | cohort | 13 premature infants with NC and exposed to furosemide divided into 2 groups: resolution of NC ( | Serial RUS | • No difference in duration of or cumulative dose of furosemide in infants with resolution of NC compared to those with persistence of NC. |
| Saarela (1999) [ | cohort | 129 infants with BW < 1500 g | RUS at 2 weeks, 6 weeks, and 3 months of life | • 26/129 (20%) of infants diagnosed with NC. |
| Schell-Feith (2000) [ | cohort | 215 infants with GA < 32 weeks | RUS at 4 weeks of life and at term | • NC diagnosed in 50/150 (33%) of infants at 4 weeks of life and 83/201 (41%) at term (NS). |
| Narendra (2001) [ | cohort | 101 infants with GA < 32 weeks or BW < 1500 g | RUS at 1 month of age and at term or NICU discharge | • 16/101 (16%) diagnosed with NC. |
| Hoppe (2002) [ | cohort | 16 infants with GA < 37 weeks and diagnosed with NC | RUS during NICU admission and every 3–6 months following discharge | • NC persisted in 4/12 (33%) infants who received follow-up. |
| Hein (2004) [ | cohort | 114 infants with BW < 1500 g divided into 2 groups: 1) NC ( | RUS every 2 weeks during NICU admission | • No difference in duration of furosemide therapy between groups. |
| Ketkeaw (2004) [ | cohort | 36 infants with GA < 32 weeks and BW < 1250 g | RUS prior to NICU discharge | • 14/36 (39%) were diagnosed with NC. |
| Cranefield (2004) [ | cohort | Cohort of infants enrolled in randomized trial of two regimens of dexamethasone for the prevention of BPD. | RUS on study entry, day of life 28, and at discharge or 36 weeks postmenstrual age | • 15/18 (83%) of infants for whom complete data were available were diagnosed with NC prior to discharge or 36 weeks postmenstrual age. |
| Gimpel (2010) [ | cohort | 55 infants with GA < 32 weeks and BW < 1500 g | RUS obtained after the first month of life | • 15/55 (27%) of infants were diagnosed with NC. |
| Chang (2011) [ | cohort | 102 infants with GA < 34 weeks and BW < 1500 g | RUS at term or prior to NICU discharge | • 6/102 (6%) of infants were diagnosed with NC. |
| Lee (2014) [ | cohort | 52 infants with BW < 1500 g | RUS at 4 and 8 weeks of life | • Exposure to furosemide did not differ significantly between infants with NC and those without NC. |
| Mohamed (2014) [ | cohort | 97 infants with GA ≤ 34 weeks | RUS at first week of life, at term, and at one year corrected age | • Exposure to furosemide was more common in the NC group compared to the group without NC (50% vs 16%; |
Legend: BW Birth weight, GA Gestational age, OR Odds ratio, CI Confidence interval, BPD Bronchopulmonary dysplasia
Quality assessment of observational studies examining risk of nephrocalcinosis/nephrolithiasis (NC/NL) in premature infants
| Study (Year) | Risk of Bias (Low, Moderate, Serious, Critical, No Information) | Comments |
|---|---|---|
| Hufnagle (1982) [ | Critical | Critical risk of bias in confounding domain: no statistical tests performed in the analysis to test association of NC and furosemide. Critical risk of bias in selection of participants into the study: All infants were exposed to furosemide and had NC; lack of control group. |
| Woolfield (1988) [ | Serious | Serious risk of bias in confounding domain: no statistical tests performed in the analysis to test association of NC and furosemide. |
| Jacinto (1988) [ | Serious | Serious risk of bias in confounding domain: Lower BW and GA associated with outcome (NC), along with exposure to furosemide. Did not control for severity of illness. |
| Ezzedeen (1988) [ | Serious | Serious risk of bias in confounding domain: no adjustment for severity of illness; small number of infants in control group. |
| Short (1991) [ | Moderate | Multivariate analyses controlling for other risk factors for NC. Dose-response relationship evaluated. |
| Downing (1991) [ | Moderate | All infants screened for the outcome had a diagnosis of chronic lung disease; high percentage of follow-up imaging obtained. |
| Downing (1992) [ | Moderate | Robust comparators; long-term follow-up. |
| Stafstrom (1992) [ | Serious | Serious risk of bias in confounding domain: no statistical tests performed in the analysis to test association of NC and furosemide. No reporting of frequency of NC in infants with post-hemorrhagic hydrocephalus not exposed to furosemide. |
| Pope (1996) [ | Moderate | Similar severity of illness in each group; long-term follow up with serial ultrasounds. Dose-response relationship evaluated. |
| Saarela (1999) [ | Moderate | Dose-response relationship evaluated. |
| Schell-Feith (2000) [ | Moderate | Large sample size. Control group without NC included. |
| Narendra (2001) [ | Moderate | Multivariate analyses controlling for other risk factors for NC. Dose-response relationship evaluated. |
| Hoppe (2002) [ | Serious | Serious risk of bias in confounding domain: Lack of control group without NC. |
| Hein (2004) [ | Moderate | Large sample size with appropriate control groups. |
| Ketkeaw (2004) [ | Moderate | Appropriate control group included. Dose-response relationship evaluated. |
| Cranefield (2004) [ | Moderate | All infants with comparable severity of illness. |
| Gimpel (2010) [ | Moderate | Multivariate analyses controlling for other risk factors for NC. Dose-response relationship evaluated. |
| Chang (2011) [ | Serious | Serious risk of bias in confounding domain: no adjustment for severity of illness. Low incidence of NC in sample. |
| Lee (2014) [ | Serious | Serious risk of bias in confounding domain: no adjustment for severity of illness. |
| Mohamed (2014) [ | Serious | Serious risk of bias in confounding domain: no adjustment for severity of illness. |
Legend: BW Birth weight, GA Gestational age