| Literature DB >> 33948560 |
R Rohilla1, N Shafiq2, S Malhotra3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Tubercular meningitis (TBM) is associated with high mortality and stroke with chronic neurological sequelae even with best of care and antitubercular therapy. Studies have shown that aspirin as an adjunctive therapy might play some role in management of TBM. This systematic review and meta-analysis has been planned to evaluate the efficacy and safety of aspirin as an adjunctive therapy in TBM patients.Entities:
Keywords: Aspirin; Meta-analysis; Tubercular meningitis
Year: 2021 PMID: 33948560 PMCID: PMC8080028 DOI: 10.1016/j.eclinm.2021.100819
Source DB: PubMed Journal: EClinicalMedicine ISSN: 2589-5370
Fig. 1PRISMA diagram of study selection.
Characteristics of involved studies.
| S.NO | Author name | Type of trial | Inclusion criteria | Sample size: Placebo | Intervention | Primary efficacy outcome | Secondary outcome | Results | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Misra et al. | RCT | Patients with TBM diagnosed on basis of clinical, CSF and radiological criteria | Placebo: 59 | Aspirin 150 mg | Stroke on MRI at 3 months | Death, functional outcome and adverse outcomes at 3 months | Death: Aspirin only 8/24 (33.3%); Steroid only 8/17 (47.1%); Steroid + aspirin 3/23 (13%); Placebo only 14/35 (40%) | Patients with both aspirin and corticosteroid had lower frequency of stroke (22.2%) vs without (55%, |
| 2 | Mai et al. | RCT | Adults (>18 yrs) with suspected TBM (atleast 5 days of symptoms and CSF abnormalities) and negative HIV test | Placebo: 41 | Low dose aspirin 81 mg; High dose aspirin 1000mg | Stroke on MRI or death by 60 days | Stroke, Death at 240 days (8 months) | Stroke or death: Placebo 11/38 (28.9%); Low dose 8/36 (22.2%); high dose 6/38 (15.8%) | Subgroup analysis suggested potential reduction in new infarcts and deaths by day 60 in aspirin treated participants with microbiologically confirmed TBM |
| 3 | Schoeman et al. | RCT | Children with diagnosis of probable TBM on basis of clinical and CSF criteria | Placebo: 50 | Low dose aspirin 75 mg; High dose aspirin 100 mg/kg/ day | Death, New onset hemiplegia at 6 months | Not mentioned | Death: Placebo: 1/50; Aspirin: low 2 + high 3 (5/96) | Aspirin irrespective of dose did not show any significant benefit regarding morbidity (hemiparesis) and mortality |
CSF: Cerebrospinal fluid; RCT: Randomised controlled trial; TBM: Tubercular meningitis.
Fig. 2Effect on mortality.
Fig. 3Effect on stroke.
Fig. 4Effect on composite outcome (New Onset Stroke + Mortality).
Fig. 6Sensitivity analysis showing effect on new onset stroke.
Fig. 5Sensitivity analysis showing effect on mortality.
Fig. 7Sensitivity analysis showing effect on composite outcome (New Onset Stroke + Mortality).
Risk of bias assessment in included studies.
| Study | Selection bias (Random sequence generation) | Allocation bias | Performance bias (Blinding of participants and personnel) | Detection bias (Binding of outcome assessment) | Attrition bias (Incomplete outcome data) | Reporting bias (selective reporting) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mai et al. | Low risk | Low risk | Low risk | Unclear risk | Unclear risk | Unclear risk |
| Misra et al. | Low risk | High risk | High risk | High risk | Unclear risk | Unclear risk |
| Schoeman et al. | Low risk | Low risk | Low risk | Unclear risk | Unclear risk | Unclear risk |
Fig. 8Bias assessment of the studies included for analysis.
Safety assessment summary.
| Study | GI bleeding or MRI proven new intracranial bleed | Others |
|---|---|---|
| Mai et al. | Placebo group: 5/36 | Did not report any other adverse effect |
| Schoeman et al. | GI Bleeding in Aspirin: 1, Placebo: Not reported | Melena, Raised transaminases, Reye syndrome: None in aspirin group. |
| Misra et al. | None in both groups | Vomiting: 28 |