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    Effects of interventions targeting the systemic inflammatory response to cardiac surgery on clinical outcomes in adults

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    Author
    Layton, Georgia
    Roman, Marius
    Butt, Ayesha
    Murphy, Gavin
    Keyword
    organ protection interventions
    innate immune system activation
    randomised controlled trials (RCTs)
    Date
    2023-10-24
    
    Metadata
    Show full item record
    DOI
    10.1002/14651858.CD013584.pub2
    Publisher's URL
    https://www.cochranelibrary.com/cdsr/doi/10.1002/14651858.CD013584.pub2/full
    Abstract
    Background: Organ injury is a common and severe complication of cardiac surgery that contributes to the majority of deaths. There are no effective treatment or prevention strategies. It has been suggested that innate immune system activation may have a causal role in organ injury. A wide range of organ protection interventions targeting the innate immune response have been evaluated in randomised controlled trials (RCTs) in adult cardiac surgery patients, with inconsistent results in terms of effectiveness. Objectives: The aim of the review was to summarise the results of RCTs of organ protection interventions targeting the innate immune response in adult cardiac surgery. The review considered whether the interventions had a treatment effect on inflammation, important clinical outcomes, or both. Search methods: CENTRAL, MEDLINE, Embase, conference proceedings and two trial registers were searched on October 2022 together with reference checking to identify additional studies. Selection criteria: RCTs comparing organ protection interventions targeting the innate immune response versus placebo or no treatment in adult patients undergoing cardiac surgery where the treatment effect on innate immune activation and on clinical outcomes of interest were reported. Data collection and analysis: Searches, study selection, quality assessment, and data extractions were performed independently by pairs of authors. The primary inflammation outcomes were peak IL-6 and IL-8 concentrations in blood post-surgery. The primary clinical outcome was in-hospital or 30-day mortality. Treatment effects were expressed as risk ratios (RR) and standardised mean difference (SMD) with 95% confidence intervals (CI). Meta-analyses were performed using random effects models, and heterogeneity was assessed using I2. Main results: A total of 40,255 participants from 328 RCTs were included in the synthesis. The effects of treatments on IL-6 (SMD -0.77, 95% CI -0.97 to -0.58, I2 = 92%) and IL-8 (SMD -0.92, 95% CI -1.20 to -0.65, I2 = 91%) were unclear due to heterogeneity. Heterogeneity for inflammation outcomes persisted across multiple sensitivity and moderator analyses. The pooled treatment effect for in-hospital or 30-day mortality was RR 0.78, 95% CI 0.68 to 0.91, I2 = 0%, suggesting a significant clinical benefit. There was little or no treatment effect on mortality when analyses were restricted to studies at low risk of bias. Post hoc analyses failed to demonstrate consistent treatment effects on inflammation and clinical outcomes. Levels of certainty for pooled treatment effects on the primary outcomes were very low. Authors' conclusions: A systematic review of RCTs of organ protection interventions targeting innate immune system activation did not resolve uncertainty as to the effectiveness of these treatments, or the role of innate immunity in organ injury following cardiac surgery.
    Citation
    Abbasciano, R. G., Tomassini, S., Roman, M. A., Rizzello, A., Pathak, S., Ramzi, J., Lucarelli, C., Layton, G., Butt, A., Lai, F., Kumar, T., Wozniak, M. J., & Murphy, G. J. (2023). Effects of interventions targeting the systemic inflammatory response to cardiac surgery on clinical outcomes in adults. The Cochrane database of systematic reviews, 10(10), CD013584. https://doi.org/10.1002/14651858.CD013584.pub2
    Type
    Article
    URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12904/17797
    Collections
    Cardiology

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