| Literature DB >> 31601215 |
Senaka Rajapakse1, Nipun Lakshitha de Silva2, Praveen Weeratunga3, Chaturaka Rodrigo4, Chathurani Sigera5, Sumadhya Deepika Fernando5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Carica papaya (CP) extract is becoming popular as an unlicensed herbal remedy purported to hasten recovery in dengue infection, mostly based on observations that it may increase platelet counts. This systematic review and meta-analysis aims to critically analyze the evidence from controlled clinical trials on the efficacy and safety of CP extract in the treatment of dengue infection.Entities:
Keywords: Carica papaya; Dengue; Papaya leaf extract; Thrombocytopaenia
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31601215 PMCID: PMC6788024 DOI: 10.1186/s12906-019-2678-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Complement Altern Med ISSN: 1472-6882 Impact factor: 3.659
Fig. 1PRISMA flow diagram
Fig. 2Risk of bias summary
Summary of included studies
| Study | Methods | Participants | Interventions | Outcomes | Adverse events |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Assir et al. [ | Randomized single blind placebo controlled study | Patients > 14 years with DF or DHF with platelet < 50 × 109(19 intervention, 20 control) | CP leaf extract syrup 5 ml twice a day for four days | Mean platelet count increments after 2–4 days were not statistically significant between the two groups. Mean platelet increment between day 5(4 days after intervention) and baseline was 106 ± 69.16 in the intervention group and 82.3 ± 37.28 in the control group, and not statistically significant. | No significant adverse effects with CP |
| Yunita et al. [ | Randomized open-label controlled study | Patients 15–55 years with suspected DF (40 in each arm) | CP leaf extract capsule 1100 mg three times a day | Platelet counts rise more rapid in the intervention group ( | Not reported |
| Subenthiran et al. [ | Randomized open label controlled study | Patients 18–60 years with DF or DHF with platelet < 100 × 109(145 in each arm) | Fresh juice from 50 g of CP leaves daily for three days | Mean difference in platelet count at 8 h and after 40 h: intervention group − 16.764 (− 24.566, − 8.964), | Not reported |
| Abhishek et al. [ | Randomized open label controlled study | Patients 18–60 years with DF or DHF I, II with platelet count 30 – 100 × 109 (30 in each arm) | CP leaf extract tablets 1100 mg three times a day for five days | Mean platelet count after five days: intervention group 110.71 + 30.57, control group 75.63 + 22.49. Mean difference in platelet count from day 1 to day 5: 39.89 + 38.50 in the intervention group, 0.71 + 24.76 in the control group, | Not reported |
| Gowda et al. [ | Randomized, open label controlled study | Patients 18–60 years with DF or DHF I, II with platelet count 30-100 × 109 (14 intervention group, 16 control group) | CP leaf extract tablets 1100 mg three times a day for five days | Mean platelet count on day 5: intervention group 104.71 ± 30.57, control group 66.63 ± 22.49. Mean difference in platelet count from day 1 to day 5: intervention group 39.92 ± 38.51, control group 00.69 ± 24.75, p = 0003. | Not reported |
| Gadhwal et al. [ | Randomized controlled study | Patients > 16 years with DF and platelet count < 150 × 109 (200 in each group) | CP leaf extract capsule 500 mg once daily for five days | Mean platelet count was higher in the intervention group from 3rd to 5th day. Average hospitalization period: intervention group 3.65 ± 0.97 days, control group 5.42 ± 0.98, | No side effects reported with CP |
| Kasture et al. [ | Randomized double blind placebo controlled study | Patients 18–60 years with DF or DHF I, II with platelet count 30-100 × 109 (150 each group) | CP leaf extract tablets 1100 mg three times a day for five days | Median platelet count on day three: intervention group 88.89, control group 55.63; on day four 102.57 and 64.58; on day five 155.88 and 70.52, respectively. White cell count also increased in the intervention group. No difference in haematocrit. | Nausea, vomiting |
| Adarsh et al. [ | Randomized double blind placebo controlled study | Adult patients with DF (50 each) | CP leaf extract capsules 500 mg three times a day for five days | Average platelet count was higher in the intervention group on day 3, 4 and 5 (p < 0.01). Platelet transfusion requirements: intervention group 28%, control group 46% (p < 0.01). White cell count increased in the intervention group. Haematocrit did not show significant difference. Duration of hospitalization: intervention group 3.45 ± 0.98, control group 6.42 ± 0.98 (p < 0.01). | Nausea, vomiting |
| Srikanth et al. [ | Randomized open label controlled study | Paediatric patients (1–12 years) with DF or DHF grades I or II with platelet count 30-100 × 109 (145 intervention, 140 control) | CP leaf extract syrup 275 mg three times a day (1–5 years age) or 550 mg three times a day (> 5 years) | Increase in platelet count on day 03, 04 and 05 were statistically significant ( | Nausea in two patients |
CP Carica papaya, DF dengue fever, DHF dengue haemorrhagic fever
Fig. 3Forest plot of three studies comparing mean difference of platelet count between fifth and first day between two groups
Fig. 4Forest plot of three studies comparing period of hospitalization between two groups