PEDIATRICS Vol. 105 No. 4 April 2000, p. e44
, §,
, §
From the * Department of Epidemiology and
Division of General
Pediatrics, University of Washington; and § Child Health Institute,
Seattle, Washington.
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ABSTRACT |
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Objective. To determine whether corticosteroids are efficacious in treating bronchiolitis in hospitalized infants.
Methods. Online bibliographic databases (Medline, Embase, and Cochrane Clinical Trials Registry) were searched for: 1) bronchiolitis or respiratory syncytial virus, and 2) corticosteroid or glucocorticoid or steroidal antiinflammatory agents or adrenal cortex hormones. Reference lists from all selected articles were also examined. Randomized, placebo-controlled trials of systemic corticosteroids in treatment of infants hospitalized with bronchiolitis were selected by 2 investigators. Of 12 relevant publications identified in the literature search, 6 met the selection criteria and had relevant data available. Investigators independently extracted data for 3 outcomes: length of stay (LOS), duration of symptoms (DOS), and clinical scores.
Results. In the pooled analysis, infants who received
corticosteroids had a mean LOS or DOS that was .43 days less than those
who received the placebo treatment (95% confidence interval:
.81 to
.05 days). The effect size for mean clinical score was
1.60 (95%
confidence interval:
1.92 to
1.28), favoring treatment. Secondary
analyses of mean LOS or DOS were performed on 5 trials that had clearly identified methods of randomization, 5 trials that measured LOS, and 4 trials that clearly excluded infants with previous wheezing. The
estimates of effect were similar to the primary analysis but were not
statistically significant.
Conclusions. Combined, published reports of the effect of systemic corticosteroids on the course of bronchiolitis suggest a statistically significant improvement in clinical symptoms, LOS, and DOS. Key words: bronchiolitis, corticosteroid, anti-inflammatory agents, steroidal, meta-analysis, infant.
Bronchiolitis is an acute lower respiratory tract
infection, generally characterized by rhinorrhea, cough, expiratory
wheezing, and respiratory distress, that has most commonly been
associated with respiratory syncytial virus (RSV). Based on data from
the National Hospital Discharge Survey, it is estimated that
~120 000 infants are hospitalized with bronchiolitis each year in
the United States.1
Therapies currently used in the treatment of infant bronchiolitis
include bronchodilators,2,3 ribavirin,4-7 corticosteroids, immune globulin,8-10
interferon- Both animal studies and pathophysiological theory suggest that the
antiinflammatory action of corticosteroids might alleviate the symptoms
of bronchiolitis and expedite recovery,14-16 but the
majority of clinical trials have failed to demonstrate this. Although
many authors have used this lack of proven benefit to advocate against
the use of steroids in bronchiolitis,17-19 the studies
performed to date have been based on relatively small samples and may
have been underpowered to detect possible beneficial effects.
Therefore, we conducted a meta-analysis of systemic steroids in the
treatment of bronchiolitis to answer 2 primary questions. First, is
systemic steroid therapy for infants hospitalized with bronchiolitis
associated with a decreased length of hospital stay? Second, does such
therapy provide symptomatic relief?
Study Identification and Assessment of Quality
Searches were conducted on the following computerized
bibliographic databases: Medline database (January 1966 to January
1999), the Cochrane Clinical Trials Registry (as of January 1999), and Embase (January 1990 to January 1999). The search terms were: 1)
bronchiolitis (MeSH or text) or respiratory syncytial viruses (MeSH) or
RSV (text), and 2) adrenal cortex hormones (MeSH or text) or
corticosteroid (text) or glucocorticoid (MeSH or text) or
antiinflammatory agents, steroidal (MeSH). In addition, the bibliographies of review articles17-21 and all selected
articles were examined. Study titles and abstracts were evaluated, and
prospective, placebo-controlled trials of systemic corticosteroids in
infant bronchiolitis were selected for further review.
The remaining articles were independently reviewed by 2 of us (D.A.C.
and E.H.). At this stage, the investigators were blinded to the results
of the studies, as well as to the journal and author names. For
inclusion in the meta-analysis, articles had to meet the following
criteria: 1) random allocation of infants to either placebo or systemic
corticosteroid treatment, 2) concealment of allocation, 3) no reported
differences among the groups in the interventions used other than
administration of corticosteroids, and 4) collection of data on LOS,
duration of symptoms, and/or clinical scores.22 To
increase homogeneity of the sample, only data concerning hospitalized
patients who did not require mechanical ventilation were included.
Disagreements were resolved through discussion, and consensus was
achieved in the selection of articles for analysis. Data were then
independently abstracted by 3 of us (M.M.G., D.A.C., and E.H.) using a
standardized reporting form and disagreements were resolved by
consensus. Attempts were made to contact authors for unpublished data
if needed.
Outcome Measures
Length of hospital stay, duration of symptoms (DOS), clinical
scores, and oxygen saturation (oximetry) were chosen as our a priori
outcome measures. Because all included studies were conducted using
hospitalized patients, we considered LOS and DOS to be proxies of each
other and these were combined into 1 measure (LOS-DOS). These 2 measures were also analyzed independently in a subanalysis. Clinical
score and oxygen saturation data were analyzed for 24 and 72 hours
after initial treatment.
The primary analysis included all trials with available outcome data
that passed the quality review. Five additional prestated subanalyses
were performed: studies for which methods of randomization were clearly
specified; studies stratified by total drug exposure, daily dose, route
of administration; and studies that clearly excluded patients with a
previous history of wheezing.
Statistical Methods
For the outcome measures in which the same units and scales were
used in all trials (LOS, DOS, and oxygen saturation), the pooled mean
differences between treatment and placebo groups were calculated. The
mean differences were calculated for each study, and the variances for
each difference was calculated as:
2a,11,12 and vitamin A.13
Although bronchodilators and corticosteroids are among the most
commonly used treatments, clinical trials have not shown clear evidence
of efficacy for either therapy. Two recent meta-analyses concluded that
bronchodilators may have a minimal effect on the clinical features of
bronchiolitis but did not have a clinically important or statistically
significant effect on the likelihood of hospital admission or the
average length of stay (LOS).2,3
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METHODS
Top
Abstract
Methods
Results
Discussion
References
The mean differences were then weighted by the inverse of their variances and a pooled mean difference was calculated using these weights:
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Two-tailed P values of <.05 were used as the level of statistical significance, and 95% confidence intervals (CIs) were also calculated.23,24
For clinical scores, however, the studies used different scales. Therefore, we calculated the mean difference in clinical score for each study and standardized each difference by dividing it by its standard deviation.25 Heterogeneity was tested for using the Q-statistic for pooled effect sizes.23 Linear regression analyses of daily and total dose on LOS-DOS were also performed to determine whether there was a significant dose-response relationship. The potential for publication bias was investigated using the test of Begg and Mazumdar,26 using a continuity correction for ties.27
All statistical analyses were performed using Stata 6.0 (Stata Corporation, College Station, TX) and Microsoft Excel 97 (Microsoft, Redmond, WA), and results were calculated using both random- and fixed-effects models. Fixed-effects models assume that the true effects of treatment are the same in all studies, whereas random-effects models allow for the possibility that the true effects of treatment might differ between trials.23 The 2 models resulted in the same point estimates and CIs for the primary analyses and all but 1 subanalysis (the LOS only analysis). Because there was heterogeneity in this 1 subanalysis, we decided to present only the results for the random-effects model for all analyses.
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RESULTS |
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Study Selection
The literature search returned 238 articles, of which 12 were
clinical trials of corticosteroid therapy in infant bronchiolitis. After review, 3 trials were excluded because they were not
randomized,28-30 1 trial was excluded because it did not
include our primary outcome measures,31 and 1 trial was
excluded because the subjects were randomized before hospital admission
and not all patients were subsequently hospitalized, leading to a
nonrandom distribution of hospitalized patients.32 One
additional trial, now 30 years old, was later excluded because of
inconsistencies in the data that could not be resolved despite attempts
at contacting the authors.33 One of the studies included
patients on mechanical ventilation
these patients were excluded from
our primary analysis and are discussed separately in the
"Discussion" section.34 The Begg and Mazumdar
test26 showed no statistical evidence of publication bias
(P = 1.0) among the 6 trials that remained.
For the outcome of LOS-DOS, 5 trials measured LOS and 1 additional trial measured DOS (Table 1). In the 1 trial that measured DOS, hospital discharge was a priori dependent on the resolution of symptoms, ensuring that virtually all days with symptoms were captured (verified via personal communication with author).35 For the outcome of clinical scores, all 6 trials reported data but only 3 of the trials measured clinical scores at 24 hours and the data at 72 hours were too heterogeneous for analysis (P < .001). For the outcome of oxygen saturation, 3 trials reported data, but there was a large degree of heterogeneity in the timepoints at which measurements occurred, making combination inappropriate.
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Four of the included trials had clearly adequate methods of randomization specified either in the article or in personal communications, rather than merely stating that patients were randomized.34-37 In addition, 4 authors of included trials kindly supplied supplemental data on request.35-38
Characteristics of Individual Trials
A total of 347 subjects in 6 studies were included, of which 181 received corticosteroid therapy (Table 1). All study subjects were younger than 24 months old, and 2 studies were limited to infants younger than 12 months old.35,38 The most common exclusion criteria used were previous wheezing and chronic cardiorespiratory disease. Two of the studies included only infants with positive laboratory test results for RSV.34,36
The corticosteroids used in the trials included prednisone,38 prednisolone,34 methylprednisone,39 hydrocortisone,38 and dexamethasone.35-37 To allow comparability of dosage and types of corticosteroids used in the different studies, we converted both average daily doses and average total exposure to mg/kg prednisone equivalents.40 Average daily doses ranged from .6 to 6.3 mg/kg and average total exposures from 3.0 to 18.9 mg/kg. Routes of drug administration included oral, intramuscular, and intravenous. None of the studies reported adverse effects associated with corticosteroid treatment.
Analysis of Pooled Data
Mean LOS ranged from 2.8 to 8.3 days in the placebo groups and
from 3.2 to 7.1 in the treatment groups (Table
2). The pooled mean LOS-DOS among
patients treated with corticosteroids was less than that of the
children in the placebo group: mean difference
.43 days (95% CI:
.81 to
.05; Fig 1). Combining LOS and DOS measures increased the
homogeneity of the data (the Q-test P value for LOS alone
was .30, compared with .56 for LOS-DOS). The point estimate for the
mean difference was the same for the LOS and LOS-DOS measures (Table
3). Adequate data were not available or
were too heterogeneous, to perform the subanalyses regarding dosage and
drug administration. The pooled estimates of the other subanalyses had
point estimates similar to that of the primary analysis. The linear
regression of mean difference in LOS-DOS on mean daily dose and total
drug exposure showed no statistically significant relationships (for
daily dose,
=
.07; 95% CI:
.57 to .44; for total
exposure,
=
.01; 95% CI:
.16 to .13).
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Only 3 studies had useable data for clinical scores (Table 2). Symptoms that were included in the calculation of clinical scores of these studies were wheezing, oxygen saturation, accessory muscle use, and respiratory rate. In all the clinical scales, higher scores indicated worse or more symptoms. The pooled estimate of the standardized mean difference in clinical scores at 24 hours after the initial treatment was lower by 1.60 (95% CI: 1.92-1.28) among those who received steroids compared with those who received the placebo.
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DISCUSSION |
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This meta-analysis has shown that the use of corticosteroids in the treatment of bronchiolitis in infants may be more effective than previously acknowledged. In this meta-analysis, corticosteroid therapy was associated with a statistically significant reduction in both clinical symptom scores and length of hospital stay. A conclusion about the effect of corticosteroids on oxygen saturation levels was not possible given the available data. The clinical relevance of oxygen saturation levels in such studies has been debated, and at most, they may serve as a surrogate endpoint for other outcomes, such as LOS.
The difference in clinical scores between corticosteroid and placebo groups indicates that corticosteroid therapy provides significant symptomatic relief within 24 hours of treatment. None of the studies reported results for individual symptoms, so we could not assess whether corticosteroid treatment more effectively ameliorates some symptoms than others. The difference in the LOS-DOS measure also lends support to a quicker resolution of symptoms in patients treated with corticosteroids, because we presume resolution of symptoms to be strongly correlated with discharge from the hospital.
At a population level, the benefits of systemic steroids could be substantial. For example, with a mean reduction in LOS of .43 days per patient, ~51 600 hospital days could potentially be saved through the use of inpatient corticosteroid treatment. The relative safety and ease of administration associated with corticosteroids only enhances the potential benefit. Moreover, this mean reduction of stay is based on all hospitalized patients, ignoring the possibility that steroids may be more beneficial for some patients than others.
In fact, this meta-analysis raises some interesting questions regarding
the possibility that the benefits of corticosteroids might depend on
disease severity and timing of therapy initiation. It is possible that
corticosteroids may have a greater efficacy in treating infants with
severe rather than mild bronchiolitis. In 1 study in this
meta-analysis, patients treated while on mechanical ventilation had a
mean LOS that was 6 days (95% CI:
10.2 to
1.8) shorter than the
placebo group on mechanical ventilation, as opposed to a difference of
1 day (95% CI:
4.1 to 2.2) in the nonventilated groups.34 This study also found that among nonventilated patients, those who had higher symptom scores at entry were more likely
to respond to the treatment. The potential implications of this are
twofold. First, if the findings of this meta-analysis were primarily
driven by the more severe cases, these results may not be generalizable
to the outpatient setting. Second, if more severely affected patients
do benefit more from systemic steroid treatment, then this may be a
subgroup to target for either this treatment or for further studies.
It is also possible that the timing of treatment may impact the effectiveness of corticosteroid treatment. In all these studies, treatment was initiated at least several days into the course of the disease. Corticosteroid therapy might be more or less effective if initiated at the onset of symptoms. In 1 study that enrolled patients at emergency department visits, there were no significant differences between treated and placebo patients in clinical scores, oxygen saturation levels, or respiratory rates.32 The relatively small sample size of this study, however, limits the conclusions that can be drawn from it. If corticosteroid treatment is efficacious in the early stages of bronchiolitis, its use in the outpatient setting may reduce both morbidity and hospitalization rates.
The potential long-term benefits of more aggressive treatment of bronchiolitis are unknown. One trial of ribavirin in infants with RSV bronchiolitis showed in a follow-up that treated infants had significantly better pulmonary function test results and less wheezing, reactive airway disease, and pneumonia than the placebo group.41 The 1 study in our meta-analysis that assessed the prevalence of chronic respiratory symptoms 2 years after recovery from bronchiolitis found no difference between the corticosteroid and placebo groups.32 However, several cohort studies have observed associations between severe acute bronchiolitis infections in infancy and later diagnosis with asthma.42 One prospective cohort study found that 23% of the infants with a history of bronchiolitis developed asthma by 3 years old, compared with 1% of the matched control infants (odds ratio: 28; 95% CI: 4-1235).43
Although it is not clear whether this merely reflects the fact that bronchiolitis may be more likely to occur in children predisposed to asthma, if infant bronchiolitis is causally related to asthma, successful treatment with corticosteroids might reduce the prevalence of childhood asthma in treated children. In contrast, if bronchiolitis is more common or severe in children predisposed to developing asthma, corticosteroid therapy might be more effective in these infants than in those who are not so predisposed. It may be that this predisposition drives the effectiveness of steroids for bronchiolitis, just as it might in the use of bronchodilators for bronchiolitis.2 Because this predisposition cannot be identified a priori, it may still be prudent to use systemic steroids to treat all infants hospitalized with bronchiolitis so as to benefit the susceptible fraction of them.
There are some limitations to our analysis. First, publication bias is always a potential problem in meta-analyses. Although we did not attempt to locate unpublished data for our analysis, the fact that the majority of the published studies were negative decreases the possibility that publication bias could account for our results. Moreover, our analysis failed to detect any suggestion of such bias. Second, we used a standardized mean difference in clinical scoresto pool the results of different clinical scales. Although this method is commonly used for meta-analysis,25 others have shown that this method can produce spurious results.44 Unfortunately, we know of no suitable alternative method when outcome scales differ. Third, although combining the data for LOS and DOS seemed appropriate for our purposes, they may not be as reflective of one another as we hypothesized. However, given the facts that homogeneity tests showed that the data were comparable enough to pool and that the point estimates for the LOS and LOS-DOS measures were equal, this combination did not seem to be detrimental to our analysis.
A large, well-designed, randomized, controlled trial of corticosteroids
and bronchiolitis could resolve many of the questions left unanswered
here, particularly because large clinical trials do not always
agree.45 Such a trial could confirm or refute of our
findings while providing additional statistical power for more refined
subanalyses. If the true effect size is .43 days in LOS-DOS and the
distribution of the outcome followed a pattern similar to that in the
studies published to date, a future randomized, controlled trial would
need 728 subjects (364 in each arm) to achieve 80% power at an
-level of .05.
Including infants with a broad range of disease severity would allow investigators to analyze whether corticosteroids have a differential effect that corresponds to disease severity, although this would necessitate a larger sample size. Using objective outcome measures such as LOS would allow greater comparability among studies, and standardized discharge criteria could enhance the objectivity of this measure. Other suggestions include the use of a moderate dose of steroids, performing stratified analyses by initial severity of illness, and monitoring of adverse events. Long-term follow-up could assess which children in the study are later diagnosed with asthma. Although further study is clearly needed, the long history of systemic steroid use in inpatient asthma therapy and its acceptable safety profile lead us to conclude that they should be considered in the therapy of infants with bronchiolitis.
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ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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This work was supported, in part, by a grant from the Packard Foundation.
Dr Christakis is a Robert Wood Johnson Generalist Faculty Physician Scholar.
We thank Dr Frederick Rivara for his thoughtful critique of this manuscript.
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FOOTNOTES |
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Received for publication Sep 16, 1999; accepted Nov 19, 1999.
Reprint requests to (D.A.C.) Child Health Institute, 146 N Canal St, Suite 300, Seattle WA 98103. E-mail: dachris{at}u.washington.edu
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ABBREVIATIONS |
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RSV, respiratory syncytial virus; LOS, length of stay; DOS, duration of symptoms; CI, confidence interval.
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REFERENCES |
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