Costi David, Cyna Allan M, Ahmed Samira, Stephens Kate, Strickland Penny, Ellwood James, Larsson Jessica N, Chooi Cheryl, Burgoyne Laura L, Middleton Philippa
Department of Paediatric Anaesthesia, Women's and Children's Hospital, Adelaide, Australia, SA 5006.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2014 Sep 12;2014(9):CD007084. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD007084.pub2.
Sevoflurane is an inhaled volatile anaesthetic that is widely used in paediatric anaesthetic practice. Since its introduction, postoperative behavioural disturbance known as emergence agitation (EA) or emergence delirium (ED) has been recognized as a problem that may occur during recovery from sevoflurane anaesthesia. For the purpose of this systematic review, EA has been used to describe this clinical entity. A child with EA may be restless, may cause self-injury or may disrupt the dressing, surgical site or indwelling devices, leading to the potential for parents to be dissatisfied with their child's anaesthetic. To prevent such outcomes, the child may require pharmacological or physical restraint. Sevoflurane may be a major contributing factor in the development of EA. Therefore, an evidence-based understanding of the risk/benefit profile regarding sevoflurane compared with other general anaesthetic agents and adjuncts would facilitate its rational and optimal use.
To compare sevoflurane with other general anaesthetic (GA) agents, with or without pharmacological or non-pharmacological adjuncts, with regard to risk of EA in children during emergence from anaesthesia. The primary outcome was risk of EA; secondary outcome was agitation score.
We searched the following databases from the date of inception to 19 January 2013: CENTRAL, Ovid MEDLINE, Ovid EMBASE, the Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature (CINAHL) (EBSCOhost), Evidence-Based Medicine Reviews (EBMR) and the Web of Science, as well as the reference lists of other relevant articles and online trial registers.
We included all randomized (or quasi-randomized) controlled trials investigating children < 18 years of age presenting for general anaesthesia with or without surgical intervention. We included any study in which a sevoflurane anaesthetic was compared with any other GA, and any study in which researchers investigated adjuncts (pharmacological or non-pharmacological) to sevoflurane anaesthesia compared with no adjunct or placebo.
Two review authors independently searched the databases, decided on inclusion eligibility of publications, ascertained study quality and extracted data. They then resolved differences between their results by discussion. Data were entered into RevMan 5.2 for analyses and presentation. Comparisons of the risk of EA were presented as risk ratios (RRs) with 95% confidence intervals (CIs). Sevoflurane is treated as the control anaesthesia in this review. Sensitivity analyses were performed as appropriate, to exclude studies with a high risk of bias and to investigate heterogeneity.
We included 158 studies involving 14,045 children. Interventions to prevent EA fell into two broad groups. First, alternative GA compared with sevoflurane anaesthesia (69 studies), and second, use of an adjunct with sevoflurane anaesthesia versus sevoflurane without an adjunct (100 studies). The overall risk of bias in included studies was low. The overall Grades of Recommendation, Assessment, Development and Evaluation Working Group (GRADE) assessment of the quality of the evidence was moderate to high. A wide range of EA scales were used, as were different levels of cutoff, to determine the presence or absence of EA. Some studies involved children receiving potentially inadequate or no analgesia intraoperatively during painful procedures.Halothane (RR 0.51, 95% CI 0.41 to 0.63, 3534 participants, high quality of evidence) and propofol anaesthesia were associated with a lower risk of EA than sevoflurane anaesthesia. Propofol was effective when used throughout anaesthesia (RR 0.35, 95% CI 0.25 to 0.51, 1098 participants, high quality of evidence) and when used only during the maintenance phase of anaesthesia after sevoflurane induction (RR 0.59, 95% CI 0.46 to 0.76, 738 participants, high quality of evidence). No clear evidence was found of an effect on risk of EA of desflurane (RR 1.46, 95% CI 0.92 to 2.31, 408 participants, moderate quality of evidence) or isoflurane (RR 0.76, 95% CI 0.46 to 1.23, 379 participants, moderate quality of evidence) versus sevoflurane.Compared with no adjunct, effective adjuncts for reducing the risk of EA during sevoflurane anaesthesia included dexmedetomidine (RR 0.37, 95% CI 0.29 to 0.47, 851 participants, high quality of evidence), clonidine (RR 0.45, 95% CI 0.31 to 0.66, 739 participants, high quality of evidence), opioids, in particular fentanyl (RR 0.37, 95% CI 0.27 to 0.50, 1247 participants, high quality of evidence) and a bolus of propofol (RR 0.58, 95% CI 0.38 to 0.89, 394 participants, moderate quality of evidence), ketamine (RR 0.30, 95% CI 0.13 to 0.69, 231 participants, moderate quality of evidence) or midazolam (RR 0.57, 95% CI 0.41 to 0.81, 116 participants, moderate quality of evidence) at the end of anaesthesia. Midazolam oral premedication (RR 0.81, 95% CI 0.59 to 1.12, 370 participants, moderate quality of evidence) and parental presence at emergence (RR 0.91, 95% CI 0.51 to 1.60, 180 participants, moderate quality of evidence) did not reduce the risk of EA.One or more factors designated as high risk of bias were noted in less than 10% of the included studies. Sensitivity analyses of these studies showed no clinically relevant changes in the risk of EA. Heterogeneity was significant with respect to these comparisons: halothane; clonidine; fentanyl; midazolam premedication; propofol 1 mg/kg bolus at end; and ketamine 0.25 mg/kg bolus at end of anaesthesia. With investigation of heterogeneity, the only clinically relevant changes to findings were seen in the context of potential pain, namely, the setting of adenoidectomy/adenotonsillectomy (propofol bolus; midazolam premedication) and the absence of a regional block (clonidine).
AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: Propofol, halothane, alpha-2 agonists (dexmedetomidine, clonidine), opioids (e.g. fentanyl) and ketamine reduce the risk of EA compared with sevoflurane anaesthesia, whereas no clear evidence shows an effect for desflurane, isoflurane, midazolam premedication and parental presence at emergence. Therefore anaesthetists can consider several effective strategies to reduce the risk of EA in their clinical practice. Future studies should ensure adequate analgesia in the control group, for which pain may be a contributing or confounding factor in the diagnosis of EA. Regardless of the EA scale used, it would be helpful for study authors to report the risk of EA, so that this might be included in future meta-analyses. Researchers should also consider combining effective interventions as a multi-modal approach to further reduce the risk of EA.
七氟醚是一种吸入性挥发性麻醉剂,广泛应用于小儿麻醉实践。自其应用以来,术后出现的行为紊乱,即苏醒期躁动(EA)或苏醒期谵妄(ED),已被认为是七氟醚麻醉苏醒过程中可能出现的问题。在本系统评价中,使用EA来描述这一临床现象。患有EA的儿童可能会烦躁不安,可能会导致自我伤害,或可能弄乱敷料、手术部位或留置装置,从而使家长对孩子的麻醉情况感到不满。为防止出现此类情况,可能需要对儿童进行药物或身体约束。七氟醚可能是导致EA发生的主要因素。因此,基于证据了解七氟醚与其他全身麻醉剂及辅助药物相比的风险/效益情况,将有助于其合理和优化使用。
比较七氟醚与其他全身麻醉(GA)药物(无论是否使用药物或非药物辅助手段)在儿童麻醉苏醒期发生EA的风险。主要结局是EA的风险;次要结局是躁动评分。
我们检索了以下数据库,检索时间从建库至2013年1月19日:Cochrane系统评价数据库、Ovid MEDLINE、Ovid EMBASE、护理学与健康相关文献累积索引(CINAHL)(EBSCOhost)、循证医学评价(EBMR)和科学引文索引,以及其他相关文章的参考文献列表和在线试验注册库。
我们纳入了所有针对18岁以下接受全身麻醉(无论是否进行手术干预)儿童的随机(或半随机)对照试验。我们纳入了任何将七氟醚麻醉与其他任何GA进行比较的研究,以及任何研究人员将七氟醚麻醉的辅助药物(药物或非药物)与无辅助药物或安慰剂进行比较的研究。
两位综述作者独立检索数据库,确定出版物的纳入资格,评估研究质量并提取数据。然后,他们通过讨论解决结果之间的差异。数据录入RevMan 5.2进行分析和展示。EA风险的比较以风险比(RR)及95%置信区间(CI)表示。在本综述中,七氟醚被视为对照麻醉。进行了适当的敏感性分析,以排除存在高偏倚风险的研究并调查异质性。
我们纳入了158项研究,涉及14045名儿童。预防EA的干预措施主要分为两大类。第一类是将其他GA与七氟醚麻醉进行比较(69项研究),第二类是七氟醚麻醉使用辅助药物与不使用辅助药物进行比较(100项研究)。纳入研究的总体偏倚风险较低。推荐分级、评估、制定与评价工作组(GRADE)对证据质量的总体评估为中等到高等级。使用了多种EA量表,也采用了不同的截断水平来确定EA的有无。一些研究涉及在疼痛手术过程中术中镇痛不足或未进行镇痛的儿童。与七氟醚麻醉相比,氟烷(RR 0.51,95%CI 0.41至0.63,3,534名参与者,高质量证据)和丙泊酚麻醉导致EA的风险较低。丙泊酚在整个麻醉过程中使用时有效(RR 0.35,95%CI 0.25至0.51,1,098名参与者,高质量证据),以及在七氟醚诱导后仅在麻醉维持阶段使用时也有效(RR 0.59,95%CI 0.46至0.76,738名参与者,高质量证据)。与七氟醚相比,未发现地氟醚(RR 1.46,95%CI 0.92至2.31,408名参与者,中等质量证据)或异氟醚(RR 0.76,95%CI 0.46至1.23,379名参与者,中等质量证据)对EA风险有明显影响。与不使用辅助药物相比,在七氟醚麻醉期间降低EA风险的有效辅助药物包括右美托咪定(RR 0.37,95%CI 0.29至0.47,851名参与者,高质量证据)、可乐定(RR 0.45,95%CI 0.31至0.66,739名参与者,高质量证据)、阿片类药物,特别是芬太尼(RR 0.37,95%CI 0.27至0.50,1,247名参与者,高质量证据)以及麻醉结束时静脉注射丙泊酚(RR 0.58,95%CI 0.38至0.89,394名参与者,中等质量证据)、氯胺酮(RR 0.30,95%CI 0.13至0.69,231名参与者,中等质量证据)或咪达唑仑(RR 0.57,95%CI 0.41至0.81,116名参与者,中等质量证据)。咪达唑仑口服术前用药(RR 0.81,95%CI 0.59至1.12,370名参与者,中等质量证据)和苏醒期家长陪伴(RR 0.91,95%CI 0.51至1.60,180名参与者,中等质量证据)并未降低EA风险。在纳入研究中,不到10%的研究存在一个或多个被指定为高偏倚风险的因素。对这些研究的敏感性分析显示,EA风险没有临床相关变化。在这些比较中存在显著异质性:氟烷;可乐定;芬太尼;咪达唑仑术前用药;麻醉结束时静脉注射1mg/kg丙泊酚;以及麻醉结束时静脉注射0.25mg/kg氯胺酮。在调查异质性时,仅在潜在疼痛的情况下,即腺样体切除术/腺样体扁桃体切除术的背景下(丙泊酚静脉注射;咪达唑仑术前用药)以及未进行区域阻滞的情况下(可乐定),发现结果有临床相关变化。
与七氟醚麻醉相比,丙泊酚、氟烷、α-2激动剂(右美托咪定、可乐定)、阿片类药物(如芬太尼)和氯胺酮可降低EA风险,而未发现地氟醚、异氟醚、咪达唑仑术前用药和苏醒期家长陪伴对EA风险有明显影响。因此,麻醉医生在临床实践中可考虑多种有效策略来降低EA风险。未来研究应确保对照组有足够的镇痛措施,因为疼痛可能是EA诊断中的一个促成或混杂因素。无论使用何种EA量表,研究作者报告EA风险都将有所帮助,以便未来的荟萃分析能够纳入该风险。研究人员还应考虑将有效干预措施联合使用,作为一种多模式方法来进一步降低EA风险。