| Literature DB >> 31163625 |
Guillaume Voiriot1,2,3, Quentin Philippot4, Alexandre Elabbadi5, Carole Elbim6, Martin Chalumeau7,8, Muriel Fartoukh9,10,11.
Abstract
Non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) are commonly used to alleviate symptoms during community-acquired pneumonia (CAP), while neither clinical data nor guidelines encourage this use. Experimental data suggest that NSAIDs impair neutrophil intrinsic functions, their recruitment to the inflammatory site, and the resolution of inflammatory processes after acute pulmonary bacterial challenge. During CAP, numerous observational data collected in hospitalized children, hospitalized adults, and adults admitted to intensive care units (ICUs) support a strong association between pre-hospital NSAID exposure and a delayed hospital referral, a delayed administration of antibiotic therapy, and the occurrence of pleuropulmonary complications, even in the only study that has accounted for a protopathic bias. Other endpoints have been described including a longer duration of antibiotic therapy and a greater hospital length of stay. In all adult series, patients exposed to NSAIDs were younger and had fewer comorbidities. The mechanisms by which NSAID use would entail a complicated course in pneumonia still remain uncertain. The temporal hypothesis and the immunological hypothesis are the two main emerging hypotheses. Current data strongly support an association between NSAID intake during the outpatient treatment of CAP and a complicated course. This should encourage experts and scientific societies to strongly advise against the use of NSAIDs in the management of lower respiratory tract infections.Entities:
Keywords: community-acquired pneumonia; non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs; pleural effusion
Year: 2019 PMID: 31163625 PMCID: PMC6617416 DOI: 10.3390/jcm8060786
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Med ISSN: 2077-0383 Impact factor: 4.241
Studies exploring the impact of pre-hospital exposure to NSAIDs in lower respiratory tract infections.
| Author; Study Period | Population (Number of Patients); Country | Study Drug | Care Setting | Study Design | Comment |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Francois [ | Children ( | Ibuprofen | Hospital ward | Retrospective case-control | Recent NSAID exposure was an independent risk factor of pleural empyema (OR 2.6 (1.5–4.4)) |
| Byington [ | Children ( | Ibuprofen | Hospital ward | Retrospective case-control | Recent NSAID exposure was an independent risk factor of pleural empyema (OR 4.0 (2.5–6.5)) |
| Voiriot [ | Adults ( | NSAIDs | ICU | Prospective cohort | Recent NSAID exposure was an independent risk factor of pleuropulmonary complications (pleural empyema, excavation) (OR 8.1 (2.3–28)) |
| Messika [ | Adults ( | NSAIDs | ICU | Historical cohort | Recent NSAID exposure was associated with a higher risk of pleuropulmonary complications (pleural empyema, excavation) (OR 5.8 (2.0–17)) |
| Elemraid [ | Children ( | Ibuprofen | Hospital ward | Prospective case-control | Recent NSAID exposure was involved in 82% of cases with pleural empyema, compared to 46% of cases without complications (OR 1.9 (0.8–3.2)) |
| Le Bourgeois [ | Children ( | NSAIDs | Hospital ward | Prospective case-control | Recent NSAID exposure was an independent risk factor of pleural empyema (OR 2.8 (1.4–5.6)) |
| Kotsiou [ | Adults ( | NSAIDs | Hospital ward | Prospective cohort | Pre-hospital NSAID use for more than 6 days was associated with a prolonged hospitalization duration |
| Basille [ | Adults ( | NSAIDs | Hospital ward | Prospective cohort | Recent NSAID exposure was an independent risk factor of pleural empyema (OR 2.6 (1.02–6.6)) |
| Krenke [ | Children ( | Ibuprofen | Hospital ward | Prospective cohort | A dose–effect relationship was found: exposure to a cumulative dose of ibuprofen higher than 78 mg/kg was significantly associated with an increased risk of pleuropulmonary complications, such as parapneumonic pleural effusion, pleural empyema, necrotizing pneumonia and pulmonary abscess (OR 2.5 (1.3–4.9)) |
| Basille [ | Adults ( | NSAIDs | Hospital ward | Registry-based | NSAID exposure was associated with pleural empyema and/or lung abscess (RR 1.81 (1.60–2.05)) |
Abbreviations: CAP = community acquired pneumonia; ICU = intensive care unit; LRTI = lower respiratory tract infections; n = number; NSAIDs = non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs; OR = odds ratio; RR = rate ratio. Odds ratio (OR) and rate ratio (RR) are expressed as values at 95% confidence intervals. * Studies that took into account the protopathic bias.
Figure 1During pneumonia, NSAIDs may interfere with acute inflammation response and resolution. Invading pathogens within the alveolar air space induce an innate immune response, which involves cyclooxygenases (COX) to generate lipid mediators of inflammation such as prostaglandins (PG) E2 and I2 (1). NSAIDs may alter the subsequent recruitment of polymorphonuclear neutrophils through both COX-dependent and COX-independent effects. NSAIDs also alter their intrinsic functions such as phagocytosis and degranulation (2). The acute phase response is followed by a lipid mediator class switching (3), which leads to the biosynthesis of pro-resolving mediators such as lipoxins and resolvins (4). By inhibiting this stop signal through COX-2 inhibition, NSAIDs may limit the local recruitment of monocytes, which act through efferocytosis to resolve exudate, and subsequently hamper the resolution of inflammation (5). Abbreviations: COX-D = Cyclooxygenase-dependent; COX-iD = Cyclooxygenase-independent; COX2-D = Cyclooxygenase 2-dependent. Adapted from Serhan et al. [34].