Parenteral thiamine for prevention and treatment of delirium in critically ill adults: a systematic review protocol
Parenteral thiamine for prevention and treatment of delirium in critically ill adults: a systematic review protocol
Background: Delirium is an acute confusional state, common in critical illness and associated with cognitive decline. There is no effective pharmacotherapy to prevent or treat delirium, although it is scientifically plausible that thiamine could be effective. Thiamine studies in dementia patients are inconclusive. Aside from small numbers, all used oral administration: bioavailability of thiamine is poor; parenteral thiamine bypasses this. In the UK, parenteral thiamine is administered as a compound vitamin B and C solution (Pabrinex®). The aim of this review is to evaluate the effectiveness of parenteral thiamine (alone or in a compound solution) in preventing or treating delirium in critical illness.
Methods: We will search for studies in electronic databases (MEDLINE (Pro-Quest), EMBASE, CINAHL, LILACS, CNKI, AMED, and Cochrane CENTRAL), clinical trials registries (WHO International Clinical Trials Registry, ClinicalTrials.gov, and Controlled-trials.com), and grey literature (Google Scholar, conference proceedings, and Index to Theses). We will perform complementary searches of reference lists of included studies, relevant reviews, clinical practice guidelines, or other pertinent documents (e.g. official documents and government reports). We will consider quasi-randomised or randomised controlled trials in critically ill adults. We will include studies that evaluate parenteral thiamine versus standard of care, placebo, or any other non-pharmacological or pharmacological interventions. The primary outcomes will be the delirium core outcome set, including incidence and severity of delirium and cognition. Secondary outcomes are adapted from the ventilation core outcome set: duration of mechanical ventilation, length of stay, and adverse events incidence. Screening, data extraction, and risk of bias assessment will be undertaken independently by two reviewers. If data permits, we will conduct meta-analyses using a random effects model and, where appropriate, sensitivity and subgroup analyses to explore sources of heterogeneity.
Discussion: This review will provide evidence for the effectiveness of parental thiamine in the prevention or treatment of delirium in critical care. Findings will contribute to establishing the need for a multicentre study of parenteral thiamine in the prevention and treatment of critical care delirium.
Systematic review registrationPROSPERO CRD42019118808
McKenzie, Cathrine A.
ec344dee-5777-49c5-970e-6326e82c9f8c
Page, Valerie J.
f71e959c-2913-4080-bdc3-f27d1e6ce3c0
Strain, W. David
23572ff1-dd81-4918-a088-f5ba549b13ca
Blackwood, Bronagh
4fa7b74c-663d-43bd-b89c-20dc21d0d7b8
Ostermann, Marlies
3aad45dd-7d86-40cf-80ee-d6401ebdace2
Spronk, Peter E.
3826029e-5d71-45d4-9e6b-983a0f5b8f2b
McAuley, Daniel F.
03fd8aff-b05b-4bd6-8f4c-952f598095c1
5 June 2020
McKenzie, Cathrine A.
ec344dee-5777-49c5-970e-6326e82c9f8c
Page, Valerie J.
f71e959c-2913-4080-bdc3-f27d1e6ce3c0
Strain, W. David
23572ff1-dd81-4918-a088-f5ba549b13ca
Blackwood, Bronagh
4fa7b74c-663d-43bd-b89c-20dc21d0d7b8
Ostermann, Marlies
3aad45dd-7d86-40cf-80ee-d6401ebdace2
Spronk, Peter E.
3826029e-5d71-45d4-9e6b-983a0f5b8f2b
McAuley, Daniel F.
03fd8aff-b05b-4bd6-8f4c-952f598095c1
McKenzie, Cathrine A., Page, Valerie J., Strain, W. David, Blackwood, Bronagh, Ostermann, Marlies, Spronk, Peter E. and McAuley, Daniel F.
(2020)
Parenteral thiamine for prevention and treatment of delirium in critically ill adults: a systematic review protocol.
Systematic Reviews, 9, [131].
(doi:10.1186/s13643-020-01380-z).
Abstract
Background: Delirium is an acute confusional state, common in critical illness and associated with cognitive decline. There is no effective pharmacotherapy to prevent or treat delirium, although it is scientifically plausible that thiamine could be effective. Thiamine studies in dementia patients are inconclusive. Aside from small numbers, all used oral administration: bioavailability of thiamine is poor; parenteral thiamine bypasses this. In the UK, parenteral thiamine is administered as a compound vitamin B and C solution (Pabrinex®). The aim of this review is to evaluate the effectiveness of parenteral thiamine (alone or in a compound solution) in preventing or treating delirium in critical illness.
Methods: We will search for studies in electronic databases (MEDLINE (Pro-Quest), EMBASE, CINAHL, LILACS, CNKI, AMED, and Cochrane CENTRAL), clinical trials registries (WHO International Clinical Trials Registry, ClinicalTrials.gov, and Controlled-trials.com), and grey literature (Google Scholar, conference proceedings, and Index to Theses). We will perform complementary searches of reference lists of included studies, relevant reviews, clinical practice guidelines, or other pertinent documents (e.g. official documents and government reports). We will consider quasi-randomised or randomised controlled trials in critically ill adults. We will include studies that evaluate parenteral thiamine versus standard of care, placebo, or any other non-pharmacological or pharmacological interventions. The primary outcomes will be the delirium core outcome set, including incidence and severity of delirium and cognition. Secondary outcomes are adapted from the ventilation core outcome set: duration of mechanical ventilation, length of stay, and adverse events incidence. Screening, data extraction, and risk of bias assessment will be undertaken independently by two reviewers. If data permits, we will conduct meta-analyses using a random effects model and, where appropriate, sensitivity and subgroup analyses to explore sources of heterogeneity.
Discussion: This review will provide evidence for the effectiveness of parental thiamine in the prevention or treatment of delirium in critical care. Findings will contribute to establishing the need for a multicentre study of parenteral thiamine in the prevention and treatment of critical care delirium.
Systematic review registrationPROSPERO CRD42019118808
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Accepted/In Press date: 4 May 2020
Published date: 5 June 2020
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 477030
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/477030
ISSN: 2046-4053
PURE UUID: 08f0d751-78f2-4333-8f89-87da53fc1f68
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Date deposited: 23 May 2023 17:01
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 04:23
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Contributors
Author:
Cathrine A. McKenzie
Author:
Valerie J. Page
Author:
W. David Strain
Author:
Bronagh Blackwood
Author:
Marlies Ostermann
Author:
Peter E. Spronk
Author:
Daniel F. McAuley
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