4.5 Article

A Network Meta-analysis of Dexamethasone for Preventing Postextubation Upper Airway Obstruction in Children

Journal

ANNALS OF THE AMERICAN THORACIC SOCIETY
Volume 20, Issue 1, Pages 118-130

Publisher

AMER THORACIC SOC
DOI: 10.1513/AnnalsATS.202203-212OC

Keywords

dexamethasone; upper airway obstruction; extubation; meta-analysis

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In this study, the effectiveness of different corticosteroid regimens in preventing upper airway obstruction (UAO) and reintubation in children was compared. The results showed that early initiation of dexamethasone, ideally more than 12 hours before extubation, is more important than the dose in preventing UAO. However, there is no clear optimal regimen for preventing reintubation. Therefore, individualized steroid strategies should consider the potential adverse events associated with dexamethasone and the individual risk of UAO and reintubation.
Rationale: Periextubation corticosteroids are commonly used in children to prevent upper airway obstruction (UAO). However, the best timing and dose combination of corticosteroids is unknown. Objectives: To compare effectiveness of different corticosteroid regimens in preventing UAO and reintubation. Methods: MEDLINE, CINAHL, and Embase search identified randomized trials in children using corticosteroids to prevent UAO. All studies used dexamethasone. The studies were categorized based on timing of initiation of dexamethasone (early use: >12 h before extubation) and the dose (high dose: >= 0.5 mg/kg/dose). We performed Bayesian network meta-analysis with studies grouped into four regimens: high dose, early use (HE); low dose, early use (LE); high dose, late use (HL); and low dose, late use. Results: Eight trials (n = 903) were included in the analysis. For preventing UAO (odds ratio; 95% credible interval), HE (0.13; 0.04-0.36), HL (0.39; 0.19-0.74), and LE (0.15; 0.04-0.58) regimens appear to be more effective than no dexamethasone (low certainty). HE and LE had the highest probability of being the top-ranked regimens for preventing UAO (surface under the cumulative ranking curve 0.901 and 0.808, respectively). For preventing reintubation, the effect estimate was imprecise for all four dexamethasone regimens compared with no dexamethasone (very low certainty). HE and LE were the top-ranked regimens (surface under the cumulative ranking curve 0.803 and 0.720, respectively) for preventing reintubation. Sensitivity analysis showed that regimens that started>12 hours before extubation were likely more effective than regimens started>6 hours before extubation. Conclusions: Periextubation dexamethasone can prevent postextubation UAO in children, but effectiveness is highly dependent on timing and dosing regimen. Early initiation (ideally>12 h before extubation) appears to be more important than the dose of dexamethasone. Ultimately, the specific steroid strategy should be personalized, considering the potential for adverse events associated with dexamethasone and the individual risk of UAO and reintubation.

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