| Literature DB >> 32488731 |
Eilan Alhersh1, Dina Abushanab2,3, Samaher Al-Shaibi1, Daoud Al-Badriyeh4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Caffeine is a common treatment for neonatal intensive care management of the developmental complication of apnea of prematurity in preterm infants. There are several systematic reviews (SRs) on the performance of caffeine in the treatment of apnea. The evidence provided by those, however, is depressed by an information overload due to high heterogeneity in the characteristics as well as the quality of these SRs.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32488731 PMCID: PMC7266675 DOI: 10.1007/s40272-020-00404-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Paediatr Drugs ISSN: 1174-5878 Impact factor: 3.022
Fig. 1Systematic reviews inclusion. CDSR Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews
Summary characteristics of included systematic reviews
| First author, year | Studies | Study designs | Patients | Conditions | Interventions | Comparators | Outcomes | Conclusions |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chen (2018) [ | 13 | RCTs | 1515 | Premature infants with apnea | High MD of caffeine citrate (10–20 mg/kg daily) | Lower caffeine citrate MD (5–10 mg/kg daily) | Rate of effective treatment, defined as successful evacuation within 72 h after treatment onset, fewer than 3 apnea episodes per day, and no significant abnormalities in respiratory rhythm. Secondary events included tachycardia, electrolyte disturbance, hypertension, hyperglycemia, feed intolerance, restlessness, and in-hospital mortality | Higher MDs of caffeine citrate appear more effective and safer than low MDs for treatment of premature apnea, despite a higher incidence of tachycardia |
| Henderson-Smart (2010) [ | 5 | RCTs | 108 | Preterm neonates (born before 34 weeks gestation) requiring treatment for recurrent apnea of prematurity | Caffeine citrate 20 mg/kg LD, 5 mg/kg/24 h MD | Theophylline 6 mg/kg | Apnea failed treatment defined as no clinically important reduction in apnea (> 50% reduction), use of IPPV or death during study, mean rates of apnea, and use of IPPV. Secondary events included tachycardia or feed intolerance leading to an alteration in treatment, longer-term growth and development | There were no differences in treatment failure rate and mean apnea rate between caffeine and theophylline groups after 1–3 days treatment and 5–7 days treatment. None of the trials reported effects on growth and development |
| Park (2015) [ | 5 | Retrospective cohort ( | 59,136 | VLBW infants (birth weight < 1500 g) | Early caffeine group | Late caffeine group | Death, BPD, and BPD or death. Secondary events included IVH, PVL, ROP requiring laser photocoagulation, PDA requiring treatment, NEC (medical or surgical), NEC requiring surgical treatment, and duration of mechanical ventilation | The risk of death, BPD, and BPD or death was lower in the early caffeine group. Early caffeine use was associated with reduced adverse events, but not with the risk of NEC and NEC requiring surgery |
| Vliegenthart (2018) [ | 6 | RCTs | 620 | Infants with a gestational age < 32 weeks with apnea | Higher dose caffeine (10–80 LD caffeine citrate mg/kg; 5–30 MD caffeine citrate mg/kg/day) | Standard dose caffeine (10–30 LD caffeine citrate mg/kg; 2.5–10 MD caffeine citrate mg/kg/day) | Combined BPD and mortality at 36 weeks PMA, BPD at 36 weeks PMA, and death before discharge. Secondary events included tachycardia, failure to extubate, NEC ≥ grade 2, IVH ≥ grade 3 and death before 1 year CA, death or disability at 12 months CA, major disability at 12 months CA, GQ at 12 months CA, mortality < 12 months CA | There was a significant decrease in BPD, the combined outcome BPD or mortality, and failure to extubate in infants allocated to a higher caffeine dose. However, no differences were found in mortality alone and NDI |
| Henderson-Smart (2000) [ | 4 | RCTs | 91 | Preterm infants with recurrent apnea | Doxapram 1.5–3.0 mg/kg/h IV | Methylxanthine 6–8 mg/kg LD, and 1.5 mg/kg/8 h MD | Failed treatment (no clinically important 50% reduction in apnea or use of IPPV or death during study) and use of IPPV. Secondary events included tachycardia, seizures or hypertension, and long-term growth and development | There was no difference found between IV doxapram and methylxanthine in the incidence of failed treatment within 48 h. None of the studies reported adverse effects |
| Henderson-Smart (2010) [ | 6 | RCTs | 959 | Preterm infants with recurrent apnea | Methylxanthine (aminophylline, theophylline, caffeine) | Placebo or no treatment | Failed treatment (less than 50% reduction in apnea, or use of IPPV, or death during study, use of IPPV, and death before hospital discharge. Secondary events included tachycardia or feed intolerance leading to omission of treatment, neonatal morbidity such as PDA requiring treatment, intracranial hemorrhage, NEC, duration of IPPV and oxygen therapy, chronic lung disease indicated by respiratory support (oxygen and/or positive airway pressure) | Methylxanthine therapy led to a reduction in apnea and the use of IPPV in the first 2–7 days |
| Brattström (2019) [ | 6 | RCTs | 816 | Preterm infants born before gestational week 34 admitted to neonatal intensive care units | High-dose caffeine citrate (> 20 mg/kg body weight/day and maintenance dosage > 10 mg/kg/day) | Low-dose caffeine citrate at loading dosage equal or less than 20 mg/kg/day and maintenance dosage equal or less than 10 mg of caffeine citrate/kg/day | Mortality during the first admission, BPD at 36 weeks of CA 23 and cerebral palsy. Secondary events included neonatal mortality, IVH ≥ grade 3; IVH any grade, cerebellar hemorrhage, PVL; and lesions indicative of brain injury (any lesion detected by ultrasound or MRI) | Based on limited evidence, a conclusion could not be made regarding the safety of high- versus low-dose caffeine |
BPD bronchopulmonary dysplasia, CA corrected age, GQ general quotient, IPPV intermittent positive pressure ventilation, IV intravenous, IVH intraventricular hemorrhage, LD loading dose, MRI magnetic resonance imaging, MD maintenance dose, NDI neurodevelopmental impairment, NEC necrotizing enterocolitis, PDA patent ductus arteriosus, PMA post-menstrual age, PVL periventricular leukomalacia, RCT randomized controlled trials, ROP retinopathy of prematurity, VLBW very low birth weight
Fig. 2Quality assessment of included systematic reviews (SRs) based on A Measurement Tool to Assess Systematic Reviews (AMSTAR-2)
Fig. 3Risk of bias assessment of included systematic reviews (SRs) based on ROBIS
| Seven published reviews have provided evidence on the different aspects of the use of caffeine for the treatment of apnea in premature infants in the neonatal intensive care setting. | |
| Three of these provide high-quality evidence that caffeine is as effective as other available options for apnea and is better than the no alternative option. | |
| The four remaining systematic reviews suggest that increasing the dose of caffeine, or an earlier administration of it, enhances the effect of caffeine. This suggestion, however, and its safety, is undermined by poor-quality evidence. | |
| Hence, while the use of caffeine for the treatment of apnea is advisable, pending confirmation through more evidence, there is currently no good evidence to support higher or earlier dose administration of caffeine. |