| Literature DB >> 35061077 |
Abstract
The objective of this study is to investigate and compare the efficacy of corticosteroids, NSAIDs, and colchicine in treating postoperative pericardial effusion (PPE) following cardiac surgery in the pediatric setting, on the basis of available literature. To investigate and compare the efficacy of corticosteroids, NSAIDs, and colchicine in treating postoperative pericardial effusion (PPE) following cardiac surgery in the pediatric setting, on the basis of available literature. A systematic review was conducted by carrying out a database search in PubMed on April 20th, 2021. An English language filter was added, but no time restrictions were applied. Lack of pediatric literature prompted a broadening of the search to include adult literature. One pediatric and four adult studies were included, but the pediatric evidence was not found to be of satisfactory quality, and the findings of adult literature could not be readily generalized to the pediatric setting. No well-founded conclusions could be drawn regarding the efficacy of corticosteroids, NSAIDs, or colchicine in treating PPE, as a striking lack of evidence for their efficacy in the pediatric setting were revealed. A knowledge gap was found in the literature, indicating a need for good-quality randomized controlled trials to bridge this gap.Entities:
Keywords: Cardiac surgery; Colchicine; Corticosteroids; NSAIDs; Pediatric; Postoperative pericardial effusion
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35061077 PMCID: PMC8850227 DOI: 10.1007/s00246-022-02820-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pediatr Cardiol ISSN: 0172-0643 Impact factor: 1.655
Factors influencing the likelihood of developing or requiring readmission to the hospital with PPE in adults and in children [1, 3, 5]
| Increased risk | Decreased risk |
|---|---|
| Adults | |
| Increased body surface area [ | Prior cardiac surgery [ |
| Thromboembolism in the lung [ | |
| Kidney failure [ | |
| Prolonged cardiopulmonary bypass time [ | |
| Type of procedure: aortic root surgery [ | |
| Children | |
| Higher age [ | Prior cardiac surgery [ |
| Increased Continuous Positive Airway Pressure therapy (CPAP) duration [ | Type of procedure: patent ductus arteriosus repair, ventricular septal defect closure, conduit, and electrophysiology surgical procedures [ |
| Increased body surface area [ | |
| Cardiopulmonary bypass [ | |
| Use of inotropic agents [ | |
| Down Syndrome [ | |
| Type of procedure: cardiac transplant, systemic-pulmonary artery shunt, atrial septal defect closure (via surgery) [ | |
Fig. 1Study flow diagram detailing the step-by-step process undertaken during the literature search for this review. The syntax entered into PubMed (see Appendix 1. for details) yielded 138 articles or 137 non-duplicate articles. Of these, 16 were excluded after the English filter was applied, another 100 were excluded after the title/abstract screen, and finally another 16 articles were excluded after the full-text screen. Five articles were finally included in the review
Fig. 2Summary of risk of bias assessment carried out using the Cochrane Risk of Bias 2.0 assessment tool [7]. “?” indicates some concerns, “+” indicates low risk of bias, and “−” indicates high risk of bias. See text for details
Overview of literature on efficacy of corticosteroids in treating PPE in the pediatric setting [8]
| Study | Participants | Type of study | Drug used | Dosage | Duration | Inclusion criteria | Definition of success | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Wilson et al. [ | Children > 6 months of age ( | RCT | Prednisone, | 2 mg/kg/day (reduced to 0 by day 14) | 14 days | Diagnosis of PPS [when ≥ 2 criteria met: (1) fever > 37.8 °C; (2) characteristic clinical signs of pericarditis; (3) PE diagnosed with echocardiography, with or without diagnosis of pleural effusion] Procedures: repair of/operation–ASD, AVSD-PAB, L-TGA, Mustard, Mustard baffle leak, PA/VSD, tetralogy, truncus, VSD, ASD/PS, Rastelli (TGA/VSD/PS) | Primary outcome: Proportion of participants in each group showing complete remission at 72 h and at 1-week post-initiation of treatment and time to resolution of effusions | Significant differences found between prednisone and placebo groups ( |
Findings from Pediatric Literature
RCT randomized controlled trial, PPS postpericardiotomy syndrome, ASD atrial septal defect, AVSD atrioventricular septal defect, PAB pulmonary artery banding, L-TGA corrected transposition of the great arteries, PA pulmonary atresia, VSD ventricular septal defect, PS pulmonary stenosis, TGA transposition of the great arteries
Overview of literature on efficacy of NSAIDs and colchicine on treating PPE in adults [9–12]
| Study | Participants | Type of study | Drug used | Dosage | Duration | Inclusion criteria | Definition of success | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Horneffer et al. [ | Adults > 18 years of age ( | RCT | Ibuprofen ( | 600 mg every 6 h | 10 days | Diagnosis of PPS [when ≥ 2 criteria met: (1) fever > 37.8 °C for > 8 h; (2) pericardial friction rub; and (3) considerable anterior chest pain without the presence of cardiac ischemia, differing from incisional pain] Procedures CABG, valve surgery, CABG in combination with valve surgery, and others | Primary outcome: Resolution of PPS symptoms, including assessing accumulation of PE with hemodynamic impact post-onset of symptoms | Significant differences between study groups and placebo group ( |
| Indomethacin ( | 25 mg every 6 h | |||||||
| Placebo ( | – | |||||||
| Amoli et al. [ | Adults ≥ 18 years of age ( | RCT | Colchicine, | 1 mg/day | 14 days | Mild (5 mm ≤ PE < 10 mm) or moderate (10 mm ≤ PE < 20 mm) PE as seen on transthoracic echocardiography (patients with minimal or severe PE excluded) Procedures CABG, valve replacement, aortoplasty, patent foramen ovale closure, septal myectomy, endarterectomy, and atrial appendage removal | Primary outcome: Decrease in mean PE volume and severity between 3rd and 5th week post-cardiac surgery | No significant differences between colchicine and placebo groups |
| Meurin et al. [ | Adults ≥ 18 years of age ( | RCT | Diclofenac, | 50 mg, twice a day | 14 days | Moderate to large PE seen on first transthoracic echocardiography administered > 7 days postoperativelya Procedures: CABG, valve replacement, valve repair, CABG and valve replacement/ repair combined, aortic aneurysm replacement, ascending aorta replacement, and other combinations of the above | Primary outcome: Decrease in severity of PE grade at end of 14 days of treatment. Other assessments: frequency of cardiac tamponade, of patients showing ≥ 1-grade decrease in PE severity, and average change in effusion width (mm) | No significant differences found between study group and placebo group |
| Meurin et al. [ | Adults ≥ 18 years of age ( | RCT | Colchicine, | 1 mg/day (loading dose of 1 mg twice a day for the first day given to patients weighing ≥ 70 kg) | 14 days | Moderate to large PE seen on first transthoracic echocardiography administered > 7 days postoperativelyb Procedures CABG, valve replacement, valve repair, ascending aorta replacement, or combinations of the above | Primary outcome: mean decrease in severity of PE grade at the end of treatment, as seen on echocardiography. Other assessments: frequency of cardiac tamponade, of patients showing ≥ 1-grade decrease in PE severity, and mean change in width of the effusion (mm) | No significant differences found between study group and placebo group |
Findings from Adult Literature
RCT randomized controlled trial, CABG coronary artery bypass graft, PPS postpericardiotomy syndrome, PE pericardial effusion
aThe study defines this as a PE of grade ≥ 2 and “corresponding to a loculated effusion larger than 10 mm or a circumferential effusion of any size” [10]
bThe study defines this as a PE of grade ≥ 2 and “corresponding to a loculated effusion larger than 10 mm or a circumferential effusion of any size” [12]
Fig. 3A hypothetical study design involving crossover trials to compare the efficacy of two drugs, A and B, in the treatment of PPE. Screening of participants would be followed by randomization into two study groups, one of which would receive drug A and the other, drug B. The end of Phase I of the study would be marked by primary data analysis and a crossover, wherein the two study groups would switch treatments. Phase 2 of the study would then commence and its end would be marked by the start of secondary data analysis. This would also mark the end of the study