| Literature DB >> 33048936 |
Soumyadeep Bhaumik1,2, Deepti Beri2, Zohra S Lassi3, Jagnoor Jagnoor1,2.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Snakebite is a neglected tropical disease that leads to more than 120,000 deaths every year. In 2019, World Health Organization (WHO) launched a strategy to decrease its global burden by 2030. There is a range of issues around different interventions for the management of snakebite. Decisions around these interventions should be informed by evidence from systematic reviews (SR).Entities:
Mesh:
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Year: 2020 PMID: 33048936 PMCID: PMC7584233 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pntd.0008727
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Negl Trop Dis ISSN: 1935-2727
Characteristics of included systematic reviews.
| NAME | Review Objective | Types of Study Design | Population & Setting | Intervention | Types of Comparator | Outcome | Date of Last Search |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| FIRST AID FOR SNAKEBITE | |||||||
| Avau 2016 | To summarize the best available evidence concerning effective and feasible first aid techniques for snakebite. | 1. (quasi or non-) randomized controlled trials, controlled before and after studies or controlled interrupted time series. | Studies concerning people with snakebites or healthy volunteers with “mock” snakebites | Interventions for the first aid management of snakebites that can be applied by laypeople without medical background. Interventions for the management of snakebites that are not feasible to be performed in a first aid setting where laypeople are the first aid providers were excluded. | The interventions to any other first aid intervention or no intervention | (1) survival, functional recovery, pain, complications, time to resumption of usual activity, restoration of the pre-exposure condition, time to resolution of symptoms or other health outcome measures (including adverse effects) for studies involving snakebite victims, | March 2016 |
| EFFECTIVENESS AND SAFETY OF SNAKE ANTI-VENOM: SPECIES OR GENUS SPECIFIC SYSTEMATIC REVIEWS | |||||||
| Johnson 2008 | To analyse the literature concerning the utilisation of Crotalidae polyvalent immune fab (ovine; FabAV) in children following Crotalinae envenomation | Human case reports and studies | Paediatric patients less than 18 years of age | Crotalidae polyvalent immune fab | not mentioned | not specified | Feb 2008 |
| Lavonas 2009 | To characterize the reported response to FabAV therapy of patients suffering severe crotaline envenomation. | All article types were considered, including prospective clinical trials, cohort and non-cohort case series, single case reports, review articles, editorials, commentaries, published | Treatment with FabAV | Not specified | 1. "initial control" of a specific venom effect, (specific definition by SR author). | July 2008 | |
| Schaeffer 2012 | To evaluate the incidence of immediate hypersensitivity reactions and serum sickness reported in studies of patients treated with FabAV therapy after North American crotaline envenomation. | All prospective and retrospective cohort studies | All patients receiving FabAV therapy for North American | FabAV therapy | NA | Immediate hypersensitivity and serum sickness incidence associated with FabAV administration; rehospitalization or death of a patient as a result of serum sickness | December 2010 |
| Lavonas 2014 | To estimate the proportion of patients with crotaline snake envenomation who are treated with Crotalidae polyvalent immune Fab (ovine) antivenom and who develop medically significant late bleeding | Retrospective observational studies, prospective observational studies, and clinical trials | Crotaline snake envenomation in United States No restriction placed on study setting; therefore, all studies based in EDs, hospital inpatient units, | FabAV | Not specified | All late bleeding events (specific definition by SR author). | May 2012 |
| Habib 2013 | To review and re-analyse all published preclinical and clinical studies on envenoming and antivenom therapy conducted in West Africa to determine the effectiveness of antivenom therapy of carpet viper (Echis ocellatus) envenoming | All observational, interventional and preclinical studies conducted in the region (or on antivenoms derived from the region) | Patients from Sub-Saharan/West African countries with carpet viper bites | Antivenom | Inappropriate or no antivenoms | Effectiveness of antivenoms in resolving features of carpet viper envenoming or curtailing mortality | March 2012 |
| Lamb 2017 | Identify all the anti-European Vipera spp antivenoms currently in clinical use and to seek data on comparative effectiveness and safety. | Publications (unspecified) pertaining to clinical outcome, including case reports | Europe Setting not specified | Anti-venom | not specified | Not specified | March 2016 |
| EFFECTIVENESS AND SAFETY OF SNAKE ANTI-VENOM: BROAD NON-SPECIES OR NON-GENUS SPECIFIC SYSTEMATIC REVIEWS | |||||||
| Das 2015 | To evaluate the optimum dose (low vs. high) for snake antivenom (SAV) | RCTs | Patients having evidence of envenomation, irrespective of whether the bite was from a viper, cobra, or krait. Exclusion criteria were, presentation 24 h after the bite, history of any bleeding diathesis or any other previous neurological abnormality, and manifested allergy to the SAV. | low dose | August 2014 | ||
| Maduwage 2015 | To assess the effect of snake antivenom as a treatment for venom induced consumption coagulopathy in people with snake bite. | RCTs (with a placebo or no treatment arm) | People of any age with snake envenoming who have already developed snake venom induced consumption coagulopathy | Intravenous administration of snake antivenom regardless of the type of antivenom or the dose. | People not treated with antivenom | January 2015. | |
| Potet 2019 | To systematically collect and analyse the clinical data on all antivenom products now available in markets of sub-Saharan Africa. | All types of clinical data were eligible for inclusion: randomized controlled trials, case-control studies, observational cohort studies, case series, and programmatic data. | Sub-Saharan Africa. All patient populations of all ages were included. Studies reporting less than 10 patients per antivenom product were excluded. | Commercially available antivenom products | not specified | clinical data in terms of safety and effectiveness against the different species and envenoming syndromes. | February 2018 |
| INTERVENTIONS TO MANAGE ADVERSE REACTIONS DUE TO SAV THERAPY | |||||||
| Nuchprayoon 2000 | To evaluate drugs given to prevent acute adverse reactions to horse serum antivenom, in relation to anaphylaxis and death. | Randomized or quasi-randomized controlled trials. | Patients treated for snake envenoming with horse serum antivenom, irrespective of the snake species. | 1. Adrenaline versus no adrenaline. | As noted in intervention section | Primary | Updated search on 29 March 2004 but newer studies were not included or excluded and original 1999 version of results retained |
| Habib 2011 | To conduct a systematic review and meta-analysis of published data to assess the effect of pre-medication on the risk of EAR (early adverse reactions) | RCT or cohort study designs | Patients with early adverse reaction following antivenom administration in snakebite No regional restriction | antivenoms + pre-medication (for prevention of early adverse reaction) | snake antivenom + placebo/ no pre-medication | Early Adverse Reactions, other outcomes recorded and quality measures (as defined by trial authors) | September 2010 |
| OTHER INTERVENTIONS TO MANAGE SNAKEBITE ENVENOMATION | |||||||
| Toschlog 2013 | To develop best practice guidelines for surgical interventions in the acute management of North American crotaline snake envenomation that are both evidence based and useful to the clinician | Not specified | North America | 1. Early excision of tissue near bite site | 1. standard care alone (including antivenom, if indicated) | All late bleeding events reported in any study (specific definition by SR author). | July 2012 |
Fig 2AMSTAR-2 ratings showing confidence in results of included systematic reviews.
Summary of evidence for interventions for management of snakebite from systematic reviews (SR) (Colour code key at bottom).
| BROAD DOMAIN | Intervention Versus Comparator (if available) | No. Of Studies | Summary direction of evidence for Primary Outcome | Summary direction of evidence for secondary outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tourniquet versus No tourniquet/first aid | 7 | • Death–no difference | • Duration of hospital stay–heterogeneity in results | |
| Incision of the bite wound versus No first aid/incision | 2 | Occurrence of haemorrhagic syndrome–no difference | • Duration of hospitalisation– | |
| Suction of the bite wound versus No first aid/suction | 1 | No outcome of interest reported | • Duration of hospitalisation– | |
| Snake stones versus No first aid/stone stones | 2 | No outcome of interest reported | • Duration of hospitalisation– | |
| Traditional medicines and concoctions versus No first aid/concoctions | 2 | No outcome of interest reported | • Duration of hospitalisation– | |
| Pressure immobilisation | 7 | No outcome of interest reported | No outcome of interest reported | |
| Crotalidae polyvalent immune Fab (FabAV) (in children) | 10 | • Adverse events (acute reactions, serum sickness)– | Recurrent local effects (local injury)– | |
| FabAV (in those with severe envenomation) | 19 | • Persistent severe venom effect (limb swelling, limb pain, soft tissue bleeding, thrombocytopenia, neurotoxicity, or compartment syndrome)–heterogeneity in study results | No outcome of interest reported | |
| FabAV (in those who develop medically significant late bleeding) | 19 | • Late bleeding– | No outcome of interest reported | |
| Safety of FabAV (in patients of North American crotaline envenomation) | 11 | • Early hypersensitivity– | No outcome of interest reported | |
| Specific SAV (for carpet viper envenoming in West Africa) | 22 | • Mortality– | No outcome of interest reported | |
| Comparison between different types of Anti-European Vipera spp antivenoms | 40 | • Death— | Duration of hospitalisation— | |
| SAVs (for managing venom induced consumption coagulopathy) | 0 | No Evidence Found | No Evidence found | |
| Comparisons between various types of SAVs available in sub-Saharan Africa | 26 | • Mortality– | No outcome of interest reported | |
| High dose of SAV versus Low dose of SAV | 20 | • Mortality–no difference | • Duration of hospitalisation–heterogeneity of results | |
| Prophylactic pre-medication Versus No pre-medication | 10 | Early adverse reactions– | No outcome of interest reported | |
| Prophylactic Adrenaline versus Placebo/no premedication | 4 | Early adverse reactions– | No outcome of interest reported | |
| Prophylactic hydrocortisone versus Placebo | 1 | • Early adverse reactions–no difference | No outcome of interest reported | |
| Prophylactic promethazine versus No premedication | 1 | • Early adverse reactions including anaphylaxis–no difference | No outcome of interest reported | |
| Prophylactic Steroid along with Anti-histamine versus Only Anti-histamine (different types) | 5 | • Early adverse reactions–no difference | No outcome of interest reported | |
| Early excision of tissue near bite (in Crotaline spp. envenomation) | 19 | No outcome of interest reported | • Worse tissue outcomes—Early excision along with tourniquet and ice-water immersion but not with SAV being administered | |
| Prophylactic fasciotomy (in Crotaline spp envenomation) Versus standard care alone (including antivenom) | 3 | No outcome of interest reported | • Outcomes related to "scarring and wound-healing" and "elevated compartment pressure"— | |
| Therapeutic Fasciotomy (in Crotaline spp envenomation) | NR | • No outcome of interest reported | No outcome of interest reported |
Colour coding based on AMSTAR-2 appraisal–Peach: Critically Low confidence in evidence from SR. Green: High confidence in evidence from SR