| Literature DB >> 30728009 |
Ascanio Tridente1,2, Lucia De Martino3, Daniele De Luca4,5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Bovine surfactants are known to be clinically equivalent but it is unclear if porcine or bovine surfactants at their licensed dose should be preferred to treat respiratory distress syndrome in preterm neonates.Entities:
Keywords: Neonate; RDS; Surfactant; Therapy
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30728009 PMCID: PMC6366095 DOI: 10.1186/s12931-019-0979-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Respir Res ISSN: 1465-9921
Biochemical and pharmacological data of all current animal-derived surfactant preparations
| Biochemical (trade) name | Preparation method | Total PL (mg/mL) | Main PL° | SP-B ∫ (mg/mL) | SP-C ∫ (mg/mL) | Dose # (mg/mL) | Volume (mL/kg) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bovine | Beractant (Survanta®) | Enriched minced lung† | 25 | DPPC (70%) and PS (4%) | 0.03 | 0.3 | 100 | 4 |
| BLES (Neosurf® or Liposurf®) | Lung lavage | 27 | DPPC (42%) and PG (11%) | 0.17 | 0.49 | 135 | 5 | |
| Bovactant (Alveofact®) | Lung lavage | 45 | DPPC (39%) and PG (8.5%) | 0.3 | 0.7 | 50 | 1.2 | |
| Calfactant (Infasurf ®) | Lung lavage (from calves) | 35 | DPPC (41%) and PG (6%) | 0.26 | 0.36 | 105 | 3 | |
| Calf Pulmonary Surfactant for Injection (Kelisu®) $ | Lung lavage (from calves) | 30 | DPPC 48% | 0.2 | 0.25 | 100 | 3.3 | |
| Korean bovine surfactant (Newfactan ®) | Minced lung | 25 | DPPC (60%) and PG (6%) | @ | @ | 120 | 4.8 | |
| Surfactant-TA (Surfacten®) | Enriched minced lung† | 25 | DPPC (65%) | n.a. | n.a. | 120 | 4.8 | |
| Porcine | Butantan$ | Minced lung | 25 | DPPC (76%) | ^ | ^ | 100 | 4 |
| Poractant-α (Curosurf ®) | Modified minced lung* | 80 | DPPC (46%) and PE (6%) | 0.45 | 0.9 | 100 or 200 | 1.25 or 2.5 | |
| Surfacen$ | Lung lavage | 25 | DPPC (45%) and PI (12%) | π | π | 100 | 4 |
Data have been rounded to the closest decimal; some data represent an average of the different values available and should be considered as an estimation. $Kelisu, Butantan and Surfacen are only marketed in China, Brasil and Cuba, respectively. †Minced lung is subjected to DPPC addition and the preparation method is analogous, which makes these two surfactants similar. @All surfactant proteins in Newfactant represent 1.1 ± 0.17 of the total. ^Protein B and C in Butantan represent 5–10% of the total; πAll surfactant proteins in Surfacen represent 1% of the total. No more details were available for these three surfactants (Newfactant, Butantan and Surfacen); protein content in Newfactant, Butantan and Surfacen is not expressed in mg/mL of the final solution, thus it is not comparable to that of other surfactants. The manufacturer of surfactant-TA refused to disclose additional details. *Modification consists in concentration by liquid gel chromatography. °DPPC is expressed as % of PC (with the exception of Kelisu where it is expressed as % of the total phospholipids), while other phospholipids are expressed as % to the total mass of surfactant. ∫ Surfactant proteins are expressed as mg/mL of final surfactant solution in the vial, normalized for the DPPC concentration (with the exception of Newfactant, Butantan and Surfacen – see above). #This is intended as the licensed dose for surfactants commercially available on the international market and as a suggested dose for Butantan and Surfacen which are available in Brazil and Cuba, respectively. Abbreviations: PL phospholipids, SP-B surfactant protein-B, SP-C surfactant protein-C
Fig. 1Flow chart of the review. The studies excluded from the systematic review were two full text duplicates [24, 25] reporting the same data with major methodological flaws (lack of randomization, unclear analysis, lack of allocation concealment and blinding, unclear sample size calculation, unclear outcome definition and incomplete outcome analysis/reporting) and one abstract which did not respect the eligibility criteria [22]. Two studies [42, 43] included in the systematic review were excluded from the meta-analysis because they investigated the use of non-internationally available porcine surfactants
Fig. 2Comparisons poractant-α vs bovine surfactants for mortality (c-b) and for the composite outcome BPD/mortality (c-d). Panels a-c illustrate meta-analyses of 200 mg/kg poractant-α vs bovine surfactants (1193 patients); panels b (1482 patients) and d (1370 patients) illustrate meta-analyses of any dose of poractant-α vs bovine surfactants. Poractant-α and bovine surfactants are considered as treatment (Trt) and control (Ctrl) arm, respectively; events per arm and odds ratio (95%CI) are reported. All analyses have been performed with random effect model
Fig. 3Comparisons poractant-α vs bovine surfactants for BPD (a-b) and surfactant redosing (c-d). Panels a (1193 patients) and c (1164 patients) illustrate meta-analyses of 200 mg/kg poractant-α vs bovine surfactants; panels b (1370 patients) and d (1372 patients) illustrate meta-analyses of any dose of poractant-α vs bovine surfactants. Poractant-α and bovine surfactants are considered as treatment (Trt) and control (Ctrl) arm, respectively; events per arm and odds ratio (95%CI) are reported. All analyses have been performed with random effect model
Fig. 4Comparisons poractant-α vs bovine surfactants for airleaks (a-b) and lung haemorrhage (c-d). Panels a (1154 patients) and c (1034 patients) illustrate meta-analyses of 200 mg/kg poractant-α vs bovine surfactants; panels b (1442 patients) and d (1242 patients) illustrate meta-analyses of any dose of poractant-α vs bovine surfactants. Poractant-α and bovine surfactants are considered as treatment (Trt) and control (Ctrl) arm, respectively; events per arm and odds ratio (95%CI) are reported. All analyses have been performed with random effect model
Fig. 5Meta-regressions plots. Gestational age (GA) – response relationships for the incidence of bronchopulmonary dysplasia (Panel a; the lower the gestational age, the lower the odds) and the need for surfactant retreatment (Panel b; the higher the gestational age, the lower the odds) are shown. Gestational age is expressed in weeks
Knowledge advancement on the topic
| Outcome | Cochrane Meta-analysis 2015 [9]a | Present work |
| Mortality | Favours poractant-α (for some types of mortality)b |
|
| BPD | No difference |
|
| Airleaks | No difference |
|
| Lung haemorrhage | No difference |
|
| BPD/mortality | Favours poractant-α |
|
| Re-treatment | Unknown or favours poractant-αc |
|
| Effect of confounder | Cochrane Meta-analysis 2015 | Present work |
| Prenatal steroids | Unknown | Not significant |
| Gestational age | Unknown |
|
| Poractant-α dose | Unknown | Unknown |
Conclusions from the present work and the earlier meta-analysis [9] are compared. New insights are in italic texts
aincluding both the comparisons lavage bovine and minced bovine vs minced porcine surfactant - b only for in-hospital mortality. The overall neonatal mortality did not present any difference - c This outcome was analysed only for the comparison bovine minced vs porcine minced surfactants