Dr. Gamal Samy Aly - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 56
About This Presentation
Title:

Dr. Gamal Samy Aly

Description:

Dr. Gamal Samy Aly Professor of Pediatrics & Neonatology Ain Shams University ,Cairo, Egypt President of the Egyptian Society for Neonatal Care Evidence-Based ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:114
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 57
Provided by: medicalAb
Category:
Tags: aly | gamal | pediatrics | samy

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Dr. Gamal Samy Aly


1
Evidence Based Medicine In Necrotizing
Enterocolitis
  • Dr. Gamal Samy Aly
  • Professor of Pediatrics Neonatology
  • Ain Shams University ,Cairo, Egypt
  • President of the Egyptian Society for Neonatal
    Care

2
  • Evidence-Based Medicine

We are now in the era of Evidence-Based Medicine
(Halliday, 1999)
3
Definition
  • EBM means the proper use of current best evidence
    in making decisions about the care of individual
    patients.
  • Evidence-Based Pediatrics is the practice of
    health care based on the best available evidence
    that we are doing more good than harm.

4
  • EBM is the integration of best research evidence
    with clinical expertise and patients values. Good
    doctors use both individual clinical expertise
    and the best available external evidence, and
    neither alone is enough .
  • It is a life long self-directed and
  • problem-based learning process.

5
  • There are an average of 19 new articles appearing
    in pediatric journals every day, so, it is very
    difficult for practicing pediatricians to keep up
    to date (James, 2000). EBM allows data from
    clinical trials to be synthesized into easily
    readable systematic reviews.

6
Practicing EBM Comprises 5 steps
  • Step 1 Formulating answerable Clinical Question
    through giving time to generate questions
    to foster self learning.
  • Step 2 Searching for the best evidence to
    answer the question through acquiring and
    identifying the best information and clinically
    relevant resources.

7
  • Step3Critical appraisal of the evidence through
    evaluation of the validity and applicability of
    the evidence or clinical guidelines.
  • Step4Applying the Evidence to patients in
    practice ? through decision making
  • Step 5Evaluation of the performance.

8
Levels of Evidence and Grades of Recommendations
Grade of recommendation Level of evidence Intervention
A 1a Systematic review of randomized controlled trials
A 1b Individual randomized controlled trial
B 2a Systematic review of cohort studies
B 2b Individual cohort study
B 3a Systematic review of case-control studies
B 3b Individual case-control study
C 4 Case series
D 5 Expert opinion
9
Necrotizing Enterocolitis (NEC)
  • The most common intestinal emergency encountered
    in the NICU.
  • Incidence is up to 10 of all NICU admissions.
  • Only definitive risk factors are prematurity and
    enteral alimentation but other features include
  • Bowel ischemia and/or reperfusion
  • Inflammatory response
  • Infectious agents

10
Necrotizing Enterocolitis
  • Age of onset is inversely related to birth weight
    and gestational age.
  • Up to 20 days at less than 30 weeks
  • Up to 14 days at 31-33 weeks
  • 5 days at gt 34 weeks.
  • 2 days at term
  • No clear association with gender, race, or
    socioeconomic status.

11
Associated Contributing Factors
  • Umbilical catheters
  • Cyanotic heart disease
  • Patent Ductus Arteriosus
  • Indomethacin
  • Asphyxia/Hypotension
  • Antenatal cocaine exposure
  • Polycythemia
  • Hyperosmolarity
  • Rate of feeding advance
  • Formula feeding

12
Pathophysiology
  • No single theory that satisfactorily explains
    the etiology.
  • The general accepted sequence is
  • Initial ischemic or toxic mucosal damage
  • Bacterial proliferation
  • Invasion of damaged mucosa by bacteria
  • Transmural necrosis or gangrene
  • Perforation of bowel wall and peritonitis

13
NEC and IUGR Why?
  • Pathogenesis of NEC requires
  • enteral feeding
  • gut ischaemia
  • bacterial infection
  • Abnormal gut blood flow recognised in IUGR
  • Ischaemic damage or reperfusion injury?

14
Clinical Presentation
  • A) Insidious Presentation
  • Feeding intolerance, increasing residuals
  • Abdominal distension
  • Emesis, may be bilious
  • Occult blood in stool
  • Lethargy, apnea

15
Clinical Presentation
  • B) Sudden Presentation
  • Grossly bloody stools
  • Glucose instability
  • Abdominal distension
  • Peritonitis
  • Poor perfusion, shock
  • Death

16
  • EBM in NEC
  • (Questions and Answers)

17
  • Question
  • Could stool pattern help in the diagnosis of
    NEC?
  • Conclusion Comment
  • Presence of blood in the stool (macroscopic or
    microscopic then changed to macroscopic)
    increases the possibility of NEC diagnosis.

18
  • 0ccult (microscopic) blood has no significance
    correlation with NEC
  • NEC may be associated with more frequent and
    seedy stool this information needs more studies
    for confirmation.

19
  • Question
  • Could abdominal ultrasonography affect the
    diagnosis of NEC?
  • Conclusion Comment
  • Abdominal_ultrasonography USG helps the
    diagnosis mainly through detection of

20
  • - Portal vein gas PVG which usually missed by
    routine plain X. R. while easily detected by USG,
    its presence is highly indicative of NEC.
  • - Absence of PVG does not exclude NEC.
  • - No single imaging test is sensitive and
    specific for the diagnosis.

21
  • Conclusion
  • Colour doppler US is more accurate than
    abdominal X ray in early detection of bowel
    necrosis in NEC.

22
  • Question Could computerized tomography (CT)
    affect the diagnosis of NEC?
  • Conclusion and Comment
  • It can help in detection of bowel necrosis,
    obstruction, PVG, dilated loops and ascitis. No
    evidence available for its routine use or any
    superior effect above plain abdominal X-R or USG.

23
  • C.T study can help early and safe diagnosis of
    NEC especially after application of the new
    technique (by detecting the C.T. attenuation
    coefficient of urine after oral administration of
    contrast material).

24
  • Question Could culture studies (from blood,
    stool, duodenal aspirate and peritoneal aspirate)
    affect the diagnosis of NEC?
  • Conclusion and Comment
  • Culture studies (from blood, stool, duodenal
    aspirate and peritoneal aspirate) correlates
    poorly with NEC diagnosis because no specific
    organism associated with NEC.

25
  • Question Could detection of Plasma intestinal
    fatty acid binding protein (IFABP) be considered
    as early biochemical marker helping the diagnosis
    of NEC?
  • Conclusion and Comment
  • IFABP levels evaluation considered as useful
    biochemical marker for intestinal ischemia
    particularly in the early reversible phase.

26
  • Question could measurement of Glutamine (GLN)
    and Argenine (ARG) amino acids affect the
    diagnosis of NEC?
  • Conclusion and Comment
  • Infants who have NEC have selective amino acid
    deficiencies including reduced levels of
    Glutamine (GLN) and Argenine (ARG).

27
In the category of management
  • Question
  • Could breast milk protect against NEC more
    than artificial milk?

28
  • Conclusion and Comment
  • There is an excellent evidence that human breast
    milk decreases the incidence of NEC and its
    morbidity and mortality.
  • No evidence of full, complete protection of
    breast milk against NEC.
  • The protective effect of breast milk against NEC
    is more in the preterm babies.

29
  • Question
  • Could feeding pattern (delayed rather than
    early, slow rather than rapid and no feeding
    rather than trophic feeding protect against NEC?

30
Cochrane review Early vs Late feeding
  • 72 babies in 2 studies
  • Early feeders had
  • Fewer days parenteral nutrition
  • Fewer investigations for sepsis
  • No difference in
  • NEC
  • Weight gain

31
Cochrane reviewRapid vs Slow increase
  • 369 babies in 3 studies
  • Rapid 20 to 35 ml/kg/day
  • Slow 10 to 20 ml/kg/day
  • Rapid group
  • Reached full enteral feeds and regained birth
    weight faster
  • No difference in NEC rate or length of stay

32
Cochrane review Minimal Enteral Nutrition
  • 380 babies in 8 studies
  • 12 to 24 ml/kg/day for 5 to 10 days
  • MEN group
  • Faster to full enteral feeds
  • Shorter length of stay
  • No difference in NEC

33
  • Conclusion and Comment
  • Delayed feeding has no evidence to have NEC
    protective effect.
  • Slow feeding has no evidence to have NEC
    protective effect.
  • Early trophic feeding with breast milk or half
    strength formula is highly accepted .

34
  • Conclusion and Comment
  • Rapid advancement is more injurious than slow one
    (its relation to NEC occurrence is still unproved
    but the available studies can not absolutely
    exclude this ).
  • Ideal rate of feeding advancement is still
    unclear.

35
  • Question
  • Could antenatal corticosteroid protect
    against NEC in preterm 34w gestation or less.

36
  • Comments and Conclusion
  • Excellent evidence for a protective effect of
    antenatal steroids given to preterms 34w or less
    against NEC.
  • A single course of antenatal steroids is a rare
    example of a treatment that yields both a health
    benefit and a cost saving.
  • The protection effect is more with intact
    membranes but still present also with PROM.

37
  • Question
  • Could oral immunoglobulin protects against
    NEC?

38
  • Conclusion and comment
  • According to the recent Cochrane database multi
    systematic review and the recent multi centers
    RCT, the evidence does not support the
    administration of oral immunoglobulin for the
    prevention of NEC.

39
  • Question
  • Could oral argenine protect against NEC?

40
Arginine supplementation prevents NEC in the
premature infant
  • Randomized, double-blind,placebo-controlled
    (birth weight lt1250, gestation 32 wks)
  • Arginine supplementation (1.5mmol/kg/day) in
    premature infants reduces the incidence of all
    stages of NEC

Amin et al J Pediatrics 2002
41
  • Comments and conclusion
  • Oral arginine supplement can be used to decrease
    incidence of all NEC Stages in high risk infants.
  • Cost studies should be done before its routine
    practical use.

42
  • Question
  • Could enteral antibiotics (esp. the use of
    vancomycin and gentamicin) protect against NEC?

43
  • Comments and conclusion
  • Although there are some studies indicate that
    oral antibiotics can decrease the incidence of
    NEC. Especially the use of vancomycin and
    Gentamycin.
  • It is recommended not to use enteral antibiotic
    prophylactic routinely in the NICUS, only for
    selected high risk cases for short period .

44
  • Question
  • Could platelet activating factor
    inhibitors protect against NEC?

45
Pro inflammatory mediators are increased in NEC
  • Platelet-activating factor is elevated before the
    development of any clinical or radiographic
    evidence of NEC
  • Other leukotrienes are also involved TNF-? ,
    IL-6, IL-10, and IL-1?

46
  • Conclusion and comments
  • No enouph evidence to support the protective
    effect of platelet activating factor inhibitors
    against NEC, although, some studies support and
    prove its protective effect.
  • rH PAFI can be used in prevention of NEC for
    specific high risk infants but its routine
    prophylactic use need further RCT.

47
  • Question
  • Could oral epidermal growth factor protect
    against NEC?

48
  • Conclusion and comments
  • No evidence available in the human being up till
    now to prove its protective effect against NEC.
  • Epidermal growth factor still one of the
    promising lines of both prevention and treatment
    of NEC in the future. Its benefits proved in the
    rate model as its level decreases in NEC babies
    but its receptors are present unchanged giving
    more chance for its possible effective use.

49
  • Question
  • Could oral indomethacin increase the
    incidence of NEC?
  • Conclusion and comment
  • The use of indomethacin as antenatal tocolytic
    agent should be used with caution as the
    available data up till now do not exclude its
    association with NEC.

50
  • Question Could erythropoietin decrease the
    incidence of NEC?
  • Comments and conclusion
  • Recombinant erythropoietin could protect against
    NEC in VLBW infants.
  • Erythropoietin receptors present in the neonatal
    intestinal villous enterocytes.

51
What are Oral Probiotics?
  • Beneficial bacteria that are introduced into
    the gut of premature infants prophylactically in
    an attempt to promote development of normal gut
    flora.

52
  • Question Could the use of Probiotics decrease
    the incidence of NEC?

53
What are Oral Probiotics
  • At birth the intestinal tract is sterile, but in
    normal situations, it quickly becomes colonized
    with favorable organisms, most often
    Lactobacillus and Bifidobacteria.
  • In premature infants the intestine tends to get
    colonized with coliforms, enterococcus and
    bacteroides.

54
Probiotics for preventing NEC
  • Systematic review of 1393 VLBW infants treated
    with a variety of organisms
  • Reduced risk of
  • NEC (RR 036, 95 CI 020065)
  • Death (RR 047, 030073)
  • Achieved full feeds faster
  • No difference in rates of sepsis
  • Deschpande et al, Lancet 2007

55
NEC Still a Major Challenge in Neonatology!!
  • Up to 20-40 mortality.
  • Morbidity includes
  • Intestinal obstruction / stricture formation
  • Malabsorption
  • Short gut syndrome
  • TPN dependence / cholestasis
  • Poor neuro developmental outcome

56
Thank You Dr.Gamal Samy
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com