| Literature DB >> 36185547 |
Arturo Berber1, Blanca Estela Del-Río-Navarro2, Nayely Reyes-Noriega2, Juan José Luis Sienra-Monge2.
Abstract
Childhood acute respiratory tract infections (ARTIs) are a significant cause of morbidity and mortality, so, immunostimulants have been used as a preventative measure. Despite this, there is no updated evidence regarding the safety and efficacy of immunostimulant drugs for this purpose. This study aimed to determine the effectiveness and safety of immunostimulants in preventing ARTIs in children based on the most recent scientific evidence. Data sources such as PubMed, Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials, Embase, Google Scholar, and Scopus were searched from 1965 to 10 January 2022 to identify randomized controlled trials (RCTs) comparing immunostimulants administered by any method, with placebo to prevent ARTIs on children under 18 years of age without immunodeficiencies, anatomical, genetic, or allergic conditions. In order to analyze data from the studies, we used Review Manager 5.4 (The Cochrane Collaboration, 2020), assessed the certainty of the evidence with Grading of Recommendations, Assessment, Development and Evaluations (GRADE), and assessed the quality and risk of bias of the studies using the RoB tool 1.0. Further, outcomes were combined and analyzed using meta-analysis, subgroup analysis, and sensitivity analysis. Throughout the review, we included 72 placebo-controlled clinical trials involving 12,229 children. The meta-analyses, however, included only 38 studies (52.8%) with 4643 children (38% of the total) with data on mean number of ARTIs. These studies demonstrated a reduction in the ARTIs (MD -1.12 [95%CI -1.39 to -0.85]) and ratio of means of ARTIs (0.61 [95%CI 0.54-0.69]), corresponding to a percentage reduction of 39% (95%CI, 46%-31%) with moderate-quality data. Nevertheless, since there was considerable to substantial heterogeneity and bias was unclear in all domains in 32 out of 72 trials, the quality of the evidence for efficacy was deemed low. Only 14 trials reported adverse events. The review indicates that immunostimulants reduce the incidence of ARTIs by 40% on average in susceptible children, despite low-quality evidence, heterogeneity, and the possibility of publication bias. However, further studies are needed to establish immunostimulants' safety and efficacy profiles. This review was conducted without the support of any funding and has no registered number.Entities:
Keywords: Children; Efficacy; Immunostimulants; Prevention; Respiratory tract infections; Safety
Year: 2022 PMID: 36185547 PMCID: PMC9483654 DOI: 10.1016/j.waojou.2022.100684
Source DB: PubMed Journal: World Allergy Organ J ISSN: 1939-4551 Impact factor: 5.516
Fig. 1PRISMA flow diagram for search results and study selection
Description of studies not included in the meta-analysis according to the report of their results.
| Characteristics of studies with median or mean number of ARTIs without SD or SE or a difference between them | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Author | Setting | Health status | Intervention | Outcomes | Treatment | Control | Reported P | Favored |
| Caramia 1994 | Hospital-Clinic | Recurrent ARTIs | Pidotimod | Mean number of relapses | n = 60, 0.67 | n = 60, 2.48 | <0.001 | Treatment |
| Carriere-Roussel 2017 | Not specified | Recurrent ARTIs | D53 | Median difference of ARTIs | n = 122, median difference −0.31 95% CI –0.18, −0.8 | n = 132 | <0.05 | Treatment |
| Chen 2004 | Paediatric Clinical Centre | Recurrent ARTIs | Lantigen B | Median of ARTIs | n = 37, 3 | n = 37, 4 | 0.002 | Treatment |
| Dils 1979 | Not available | Chronic or recurrent ARTIs | Levamisole | Mean number of ARTIs | n = 45, 0.98 | n = 41, 1.93 | <0.001 | Treatment |
| Fiocchi 1988 | Paediatric Clinical Centre | Recurrent ARTIs | D53 | Mean number of ARTIs | n = 30, 2.7 | n = 30, 3.13 | Not available | Not available |
| Longo 1988 | Peadiatric Clinical Centre | Recurrent ARTIs | Thymomodulin | Mean number of ARTIs | n = 21, 1.24 | n = 19, 3.79 | <0.0002 | Treatment |
| Passali 1994a | ENT centres | History tonsillitis or pharyngitis | Pidotimod | Mean number of ARTIs | n = 205, 1.54 | n = 211, 2.63 | <0.001 | Treatment |
| Pozzi 2004 | Not available | Recurrent ARTIs | Lantigen B | Mean number of ARTIs | n = 47, 1.211 | n = 47, 1.643 | Not available | Not available |
| Riedl-Seifert 1995 | Paediatric Clinical Centre | Recurrent ARTIs | LW50020 | Mean number of ARTIs | n = 99, 0.15 | n = 108, 0.27 | 0.026 | Treatment |
| Schaad 2010b | Not available | Recurrent ARTIs | OM-85 | Mean number of ARTIs | n = 198, 1.97 | n = 198, 2.42 | 0.0016 | Treatment |
| Characteristics of the studies reporting clinical scores | ||||||||
| Fiocchi 1989 | Paediatric clinical centre | Recurrent ARTIs | D53 | Clinical score | n = 60, 4.2 ± 2.6 | n = 58, 8.0 ± 4.3 | <0.05 | Treatment |
| Giovannini 2000 | Paediatric clinical centre | Chronic or acute ARTIs | D53 | Clinical score | n = 45, 0.46 | n = 42, 0.76 | <0.01 | Treatment |
| Mora 2002 | Not available | Recurrent ARTIs | D53 | Clinical score | n = 41, not clear | n = 40, not clear | Not available | Not available |
| Mora 2007 | ENT clinic | Recurrent ARTIs | D53 | Clinical score | n = 80, 1.9 | n = 80, 3.1 | Not available | Not available |
| Renzo 2004 | Not available | Chronic or recurrent ARTIs | D53 | Clinical score | n = 36, 1.7 | n = 36, 2.4 | Not available | Not available |
| Characteristics of the studies reporting the presence or absence of ARTIs or Symptoms | ||||||||
| Burgio 1994 | Not available | Recurrent ARTIs | Pidotimod | Presence respiratory symptoms | 18%, 9/50 | 62.5%, 25/40 | 0.000 | Treatment |
| Careddu 1994b | Not available | Recurrent ARTIs | Pidotimod | Presence of ARTIs | 32%, 8/25 | 91.7%, 22/24 | 0.000 | Treatment |
| Göhring 2017 | Not available | Recurrent ARTIs | OM-85 | Presence of ARTIs | 84.6% 165/195 | 84.6% 170/201 | 0.889 | No difference |
| Fukuda 1999 | ENT clinic | Recurrent ARTIs | Thymomodulin | Presence of ARTIs | 44.4%, 4/9 | 80%, 8/10 | 0.17 | No difference |
| Mora 2010a | Not available | Recurrent ARTIs | D53 | Presence of >1 acute adenoiditis | 6.67%, 2/30 | 60%, 18/30 | 0.000 | Treatment |
| Padayachee 2014 | Pre-school children facilities | Healthy | Pelagonium | Presence of ARTIs | 46.7%, 7/15 | 13.3%, 2/15 | 0.109 | No difference |
| Paupe 1991 | Clinics | Recurrent ARTIs | OM-85 | Presence of ARTIs | 60.7%, 37/61 | 83.7%, 46/55 | 0.011 | Treatment |
| Rutishauser 1998 | Not available | Recurrent ARTIs | LW50020 | Presence of ARTIs | 24.8%, 29/117 | 45.8%, 33/72 | 0.005 | Treatment |
| Santamaria 2019 | Paediatric pulmonology Clinics and paediatric office | Recurrent ARTIs | Pidotimod | Symptom days, % of total days | N = 13, 31% | N = 16, 56% | 0.003 | Treatment |
| Taylor 2003 | Paediatric private practices | No significant health problems | Echinacea | Presence of >1 ARTIs | 55.8%, 112/200 | 69.2%, 143/207 | 0.009 | Treatment |
| Wahl 2008 | Paediatric clinics and practices | Recurrent ARTIs | Echinacea | Presence of acute otitis | 65%, 29/44 | 41%, 19/46 | 0.022 | Control |
| Characteristics of the Studies Reporting Diverse Outcomes | ||||||||
| Andrianova 2003 | Schools | Not defined | Allicor | ARTI morbidity | n = 42, reduced ARTI morbidity 1.7 fold compared to placebo | n = 41 | <0.05 | Treatment |
| Collet 1993 | Day care centres | Healthy attending day care centre | OM-85 | Presence of >4 upper ARTIs | 26.7% 56/210 participants | 33.8%, 72/213 with placebo | 0.136 | No difference |
| Espinosa Rosales 2009 | Not available | Recurrent ARTIs | Pulmonarom | IL10 levels | n = 26, constant levels | n = 26, decreasing levels | 0.034 | Treatment |
| Fiocchi 2012 | Day care centres/ENT clinic | Attending or to attend day-care-centre | D53 | ARTI duration in days | n = 81, 3.6 ± 2.0 | n = 77, 4.7 ± 2.5 | 0.04 | Treatment; only a subgroup |
| Iuldashev 1988 | Pre-school children institutions | Healthy children | Interferon | Infection rate of ARTIs | n = 1100, 1.3 fewer ARTIs than the placebo group. | n = 1078 | 0.05 | Treatment subgroup |
| Mameli 2015 | Family paediatricians | Healthy entering day-care, kinder | pidotimod | Infection rate of ARTIs | n = 29, 1.9 (95% CI 1.3 to 2.4) | n = 28, 2.4 (95% CI 1.8 to 3.0) | 0.211 | No difference |
| Martin du Pan 1982 | Day nurseries, private practice | Day care attendance, susceptible to ARTTIs | OM-85 | Days suffering purulent rhinorr-hoea | n = 36, 265/3660 days (7.24%) | n = 34, 569/3530 days (16.12%) | 0.000 | Treatment |
| Sramek 1986 | Maternity School | Healthy and recurrent ARTIs | IRS19 | ARTIs per 1000 persons days | n = 416, 7.79 | n = 409, 7.43 | >0.05 | No difference |
Excluded studies the meta-analysis
| Author, year | Reasons for their exclusion |
|---|---|
| Almeida, 1999 | Participants with asthma were included |
| Banovcin, 1992 | The trial was not double-blind or placebo-controlled |
| Barr, 1965 | Trial with asthmatic children |
| Barrett, 2010 | Children and adults were included |
| Braido 2014 | Clinical trial with adults |
| Carlone, 2014 | Clinical trial with adults |
| Colombo, 2014 | Not a placebo-controlled trial |
| Das, 2000 | Participants' ages were not specified |
| Doody-Oppikofer, 1998 | The study examined only the acute phase of infection |
| Erman, 2009 | A poorly defined homeopathic treatment |
| Fintelmann, 2012 | Clinical trial with adults |
| Fontana, 1965 | Clinical trial with children and adults |
| Graubaum, 2012 | Clinical trial with adults |
| Grimfeld, 2004 | An antihistamine was used in the trial |
| Grimm, 1999 | Children and adults were not separated in the results |
| Heinz, 2010 | Clinical trial with adults |
| Herrera-Basto, 1998 | Researchers compared the effect of pidotimod only during the acute phase of ARTI |
| Jawad, 2012 | Clinical trial with adults |
| Jesenak, 2013 | Trials comparing vitamin C with placebo |
| Kondrat'eva, 2009 | A poorly defined homeopathic treatment |
| Kozhukharova, 1987 | The trial was not double-blind or placebo-controlled |
| Kudin, 2009 | A poorly defined homeopathic treatment |
| Lauriello, 1990 | Researchers compared the effect of the intervention only during the acute phase of ARTI |
| Lee, 2012 | Clinical trial with adults |
| Licari, 2014 | The trial was not double-blind or placebo-controlled |
| Luchikhin, 2000 | The trial was not double-blind or placebo-controlled |
| Ma, 1994 | The trial was not double-blind or placebo-controlled |
| Macchi, 2005 | Clinical trial with adults |
| Makovetskaya, 2001 | The trial was not double-blind or placebo-controlled |
| Mohammadi, 2014 | Not a placebo-controlled trial |
| Mora, 2010b | A trial without the prevention approach for acute respiratory tract infections |
| Mueller, 1969 | Participants with asthma were included |
| Namazova-Baranova, 2015 | Not a placebo-controlled trial |
| Nespoli, 1992 | Not a placebo-controlled trial |
| Obrosova-Serova, 1972 | The trial was not double-blind or placebo-controlled |
| Oggiano, 1985 | Open trial with children |
| Oldini, 1990 | Children and adults were not separated in the results |
| Ortega del Alamo, 2005 | Researchers compared the effect of the intervention only during the acute phase of ARTI |
| Predy, 2005 | Clinical trial with adults |
| Prusek, 1987 | Not a placebo-controlled trial |
| Razi, 2010 | Participants with asthma were included |
| Rosaschino, 2004 | Open trial |
| Rossi, 2004 | Clinical trial with adults |
| Ruah, 2001 | Not a placebo-controlled trial |
| Rytel, 1974 | Clinical trial with adults |
| Scotti, 1987 | Not a placebo-controlled trial |
| Sly PD, 2019 | Only related to lower respiratory tract infections. |
| Steinsbekk, 2005 | A poorly defined homeopathic treatment |
| Tiralongo, 2012 | Clinical trial with adults |
| Vascotto, 1985 | Not a placebo-controlled trial |
| Yale, 2004 | Clinical trial with adults |
| Zagólski, 2015 | Not a placebo-controlled trial |
Fig. 2Summary of risk of bias in included studies according to GRADE
Fig. 3Mean difference of ARFs between the use of immunostimulants compared to placebo. Measures of heterogeneity (Tau2 and I2 statistics) and prediction intervals are also presented for the 38 studies analysis
Certainty of the evidence in the GRADE assessment of the effect of immunostimulant compared with placebo for preventing respiratory tract infection in children by the number of ARTIs, SD and incidence of adverse events.
| Patient or population: children aged under 18 years of age susceptible to acute respiratory tract infections from clinics, private practices, hospital departments, schools, orphanages, etc. | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Outcomes | Illustrative comparative risks' (95% CI) | Number of participants (studies) | Quality of the evidence (GRADE) | Comments | |
| Assumed risk | Corresponding risk | ||||
| Placebo | Any immuno-stimulant | ||||
| Number of ARTIs | The range of ARTIs in the control group was 0.64–8.4 | The mean number of ARTIs in the intervention groups was 1.12 lower (0.85–1.39 lower) | 4643 (38 studies) | ⊕⊕⊖⊖ low | The heterogeneity depends on the number of ARTIs in the control group |
| Ratio of Means ARTIs | Ratio of means was 0.61 (95% CI 0.54, 0.69) corresponding to percentual reductions in ARTIS of 39% (31%–46%). | 4643 (38 studies) | ⊕⊕⊖⊖ low | ||
| Incidence of gastrointestinal adverse events | 198/1276 (15.5%) | The odds ratio of adverse events regarding the intervention group was 0.93 (95% CI 0.65 to 1.33) | 2565 (14 studies) | ⊕⊖⊖⊖ very low | Only 14 trials have a proper report of adverse events |
| Incidence of skin adverse events | 28/1276 (2.2%) | The odds ratio of adverse events regarding the intervention group was 1.79 (95% CI 1.11 to 12.90) | 2565 (14 studies) | ⊕⊖⊖⊖ very low | Only 14 trials have a proper report of adverse events |
∗The basis for the assumed risk (e.g., the median control group risk across studies) is provided in footnotes. The corresponding risk (and its 95% CI) is based on the assumed risk in the comparison group and the relative effect of the intervention (and its 95% CI).
CI: confidence interval; RR: risk ratio; OR: odds ratio.
GRADE Working Group grades of evidence.
High quality: Further research is improbable to change our confidence in the estimate of effect.
Moderate quality: Further research is likely to have an important impact on our confidence in the estimate of effect and may change the estimate.
Low quality: Further research is very likely to have an important impact on our confidence in the estimate of effect and is likely to change the estimate.
Very low quality: We are very uncertain about the estimate.
Heterogeneity was from considerable to substantial; the risk of bias was unclear for all the domains in 32 out of 72 trials. The quality of the evidence was downgraded from moderate to low.
Adverse events were reported only in 14 trials implying selective outcome reporting. The quality of the evidence was downgraded from low to very low
Fig. 4Rate radio of ARFs between the use of immunostimulants compared to placebo. Measures of heterogeneity (Tau2 and I2 statistics) and prediction intervals are also presented for the 38 studies analysis