Do intercontraction intervals predict when a woman at term should seek evaluation of labor?

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Do intercontraction intervals predict when a woman at term should seek evaluation of labor?
EVIDENCE-BASED ANSWER

NO; HOWEVER, A REDUCTION IN the intercontraction interval is associated with active labor (strength of recommendation [SOR]: B, cohort study).

Most primigravidas who have had regular contractions for 2 hours and multigravidas who have had regular contractions for 1 hour haven’t transitioned into the active phase of labor (SOR: B, cohort study).

 

Evidence summary

Multiple cohort studies demonstrate that the expected events of normal labor form a bell-shaped curve. The range of labor experiences makes predicting when a particular woman will enter active labor difficult.

When does latent labor become active labor?

The first stage of labor includes latent and active phases. The latent phase is defined as the period between onset of labor and cervical dilatation of 3 to 4 cm or the time between onset of regular contractions and escalation in the rate of cervical dilation. Regular contractions must be intense, last 60 seconds, and occur in a predictable pattern. Escalating cervical dilation is marked by a change in the cervical examination over a short period of time (usually 2 hours).1

The World Health Organization defines active labor as cervical dilation between 4 and 9 cm, with dilation usually occurring at 1 cm per hour or faster and accompanied by the beginning of fetal descent.2

Latent labor was initially described in a large prospective cohort of 10,293 term gravidas (including 4175 nulliparas and 5599 multiparas) followed from presentation to delivery.1 Cervical dilation was assessed by examination every 30 to 120 minutes, almost always performed by the same examiner throughout labor. In primigravidas, latent labor averaged 6.4 hours, with 95% of women completing the latent phase in 20.6 hours. In multigravidas, the mean duration of latent labor was 4.8 hours, with 95% of women transitioning to active labor in 13.6 hours.

Shorter intercontraction interval linked to active labor

A recently published cohort study of women presenting to labor and delivery found that a relative decrease in the intercontraction interval was associated with a diagnosis of labor (odds ratio=1.42; 95% confidence interval, 1.06-1.90). The study failed to define either active labor or decrease in the intercontraction interval.3

Earlier admission leads to more interventions and poorer outcomes

Many studies have suggested that admitting women to the hospital during the latent phase of labor is associated with more interventions and poorer outcomes. Two large retrospective cohort studies (N=2697 and 3220) found increased rates of cesarean section in women admitted during the latent phase.4,5 They also reported increased use of oxytocin, epidural analgesia, intrauterine pressure catheters, and fetal scalp electrodes, and increased rates of chorioamnionitis, postpartum infection, and neonatal intubation.4,5 See the TABLE for a summary of the effects of latent-phase admission.

TABLE
Consequences of hospital admission during latent vs active labor

NulliparousParous
ConsequenceLatent (%)Active (%)NNHLatent (%)Active (%)NNH
Oxytocin4 43276*2099*
Epidural4 82615*58406*
Assisted vaginal delivery4 2725508650
Cesarean4 10417*8650
Cesarean5 14714*3150*
pH <7.14 4310032100
Apgar <74 425032100
NNH, number needed to harm.
*Indicates relationship significant at the level <.05.
†Study by Bailit5 also showed significant associations for oxytocin, scalp pH, intrauterine pressure catheter, fetal scalp electrode, epidural, neonatal intubation, amnionitis, and postpartum infection. Raw data are unavailable for abstraction
 

 

 

Labor assessment program reduced time in the labor ward

Labor assessment programs attempt to delay admission during early active labor. One randomized clinical trial (N=209) among low-risk women with reassuring maternal and fetal assessments in early labor divided the women into 2 groups when they presented for labor and delivery. One group received advice, encouragement, and support along with instructions to walk or return home and come back when labor became more active (defined as regular, painful contractions and dilation of at least 3 cm). The other group was admitted directly to the labor and delivery ward. The study found that early labor assessment decreased use of analgesics and oxytocin and reduced time spent in the labor ward.6

Recommendations

The American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG) acknowledges in patient education literature that distinguishing true from false labor is difficult. ACOG lists characteristics of each and recommend that a woman monitor the frequency of contractions for an hour and call the doctor’s office or hospital if she thinks she’s in labor.7

Similarly, a patient handout from the American College of Nurse-Midwives recommends calling the health care provider if contractions are ≤5 minutes apart for more than 1 hour, several contractions are so painful that the woman cannot walk or talk, or her water breaks.8

A standard textbook describes normal uterine contractions during active labor as occurring every 2 to 5 minutes, and as often as every 2 to 3 minutes.9

References

1. Friedman EA, Kroll BH. Computer analysis of labor progression. 3. Pattern variations by parity. J Reprod Med. 1971;6:179-183.

2. World Health Organization. Managing Complications in Pregnancy and Childbirth: A Guide for Midwives and Doctors. Geneva, Switzerland: Department of Reproductive Health and Research, Family and Community Health, World Health Organization; 2003.

3. Ragusa A, Monsur M, Zanini A, et al. Diagnosis of labor: a prospective study. Med Gen Med. 2005;7:61.-

4. Holmes P, Oppenheimer LW, Wen SW. The relationship between cervical dilatation at initial presentation in labour and subsequent intervention. BJOG. 2001;108:1120-1124.

5. Bailit JL, Dierker LR, Blanchard MH, et al. Outcomes of women presenting in active versus latent phase of spontaneous labor. Obstet Gynecol. 2005;105:77-79.

6. McNiven PS, Williams JI, Hodnett E, et al. An early labor assessment program: a randomized, controlled trial. Birth. 1998;25:5-10.

7. How to Tell When Labor Begins. Washington, DC: American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists; 1999. Available at: www.acog.org/publications/patient_education/bp004.cfm. Accessed November 8, 2008.

8. Am I in Labor? Silver Spring, Md: American College of Nurse-Midwives; 2003. Available at: www.midwife.org/siteFiles/news/sharewithwomen48_4.pdf. Accessed November 7, 2008.

9. Kilpatrick S, Garrison E. Normal labor and delivery. In: Gabbe SG, Niebyl JR, Simpson JL, eds. Obstetrics: Normal and Problem Pregnancies. 5th ed. Philadelphia: Churchill Livingstone/Elsevier; 2007:303–317.

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Vanessa McPherson, MD
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Adam J. Zolotor, MD, MPH
Department of Family Medicine, University of North Carolina, Charlotte

Leonora Kaufmann, MLIS
Department of Family Medicine, University of North Carolina and Carolinas Medical Center, Charlotte

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Vanessa McPherson, MD
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Adam J. Zolotor, MD, MPH
Department of Family Medicine, University of North Carolina, Charlotte

Leonora Kaufmann, MLIS
Department of Family Medicine, University of North Carolina and Carolinas Medical Center, Charlotte

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Courtney Mull, MD;
Vanessa McPherson, MD
Department of Family Medicine, University of North Carolina and Carolinas Medical Center, Charlotte

Adam J. Zolotor, MD, MPH
Department of Family Medicine, University of North Carolina, Charlotte

Leonora Kaufmann, MLIS
Department of Family Medicine, University of North Carolina and Carolinas Medical Center, Charlotte

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EVIDENCE-BASED ANSWER

NO; HOWEVER, A REDUCTION IN the intercontraction interval is associated with active labor (strength of recommendation [SOR]: B, cohort study).

Most primigravidas who have had regular contractions for 2 hours and multigravidas who have had regular contractions for 1 hour haven’t transitioned into the active phase of labor (SOR: B, cohort study).

 

Evidence summary

Multiple cohort studies demonstrate that the expected events of normal labor form a bell-shaped curve. The range of labor experiences makes predicting when a particular woman will enter active labor difficult.

When does latent labor become active labor?

The first stage of labor includes latent and active phases. The latent phase is defined as the period between onset of labor and cervical dilatation of 3 to 4 cm or the time between onset of regular contractions and escalation in the rate of cervical dilation. Regular contractions must be intense, last 60 seconds, and occur in a predictable pattern. Escalating cervical dilation is marked by a change in the cervical examination over a short period of time (usually 2 hours).1

The World Health Organization defines active labor as cervical dilation between 4 and 9 cm, with dilation usually occurring at 1 cm per hour or faster and accompanied by the beginning of fetal descent.2

Latent labor was initially described in a large prospective cohort of 10,293 term gravidas (including 4175 nulliparas and 5599 multiparas) followed from presentation to delivery.1 Cervical dilation was assessed by examination every 30 to 120 minutes, almost always performed by the same examiner throughout labor. In primigravidas, latent labor averaged 6.4 hours, with 95% of women completing the latent phase in 20.6 hours. In multigravidas, the mean duration of latent labor was 4.8 hours, with 95% of women transitioning to active labor in 13.6 hours.

Shorter intercontraction interval linked to active labor

A recently published cohort study of women presenting to labor and delivery found that a relative decrease in the intercontraction interval was associated with a diagnosis of labor (odds ratio=1.42; 95% confidence interval, 1.06-1.90). The study failed to define either active labor or decrease in the intercontraction interval.3

Earlier admission leads to more interventions and poorer outcomes

Many studies have suggested that admitting women to the hospital during the latent phase of labor is associated with more interventions and poorer outcomes. Two large retrospective cohort studies (N=2697 and 3220) found increased rates of cesarean section in women admitted during the latent phase.4,5 They also reported increased use of oxytocin, epidural analgesia, intrauterine pressure catheters, and fetal scalp electrodes, and increased rates of chorioamnionitis, postpartum infection, and neonatal intubation.4,5 See the TABLE for a summary of the effects of latent-phase admission.

TABLE
Consequences of hospital admission during latent vs active labor

NulliparousParous
ConsequenceLatent (%)Active (%)NNHLatent (%)Active (%)NNH
Oxytocin4 43276*2099*
Epidural4 82615*58406*
Assisted vaginal delivery4 2725508650
Cesarean4 10417*8650
Cesarean5 14714*3150*
pH <7.14 4310032100
Apgar <74 425032100
NNH, number needed to harm.
*Indicates relationship significant at the level <.05.
†Study by Bailit5 also showed significant associations for oxytocin, scalp pH, intrauterine pressure catheter, fetal scalp electrode, epidural, neonatal intubation, amnionitis, and postpartum infection. Raw data are unavailable for abstraction
 

 

 

Labor assessment program reduced time in the labor ward

Labor assessment programs attempt to delay admission during early active labor. One randomized clinical trial (N=209) among low-risk women with reassuring maternal and fetal assessments in early labor divided the women into 2 groups when they presented for labor and delivery. One group received advice, encouragement, and support along with instructions to walk or return home and come back when labor became more active (defined as regular, painful contractions and dilation of at least 3 cm). The other group was admitted directly to the labor and delivery ward. The study found that early labor assessment decreased use of analgesics and oxytocin and reduced time spent in the labor ward.6

Recommendations

The American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG) acknowledges in patient education literature that distinguishing true from false labor is difficult. ACOG lists characteristics of each and recommend that a woman monitor the frequency of contractions for an hour and call the doctor’s office or hospital if she thinks she’s in labor.7

Similarly, a patient handout from the American College of Nurse-Midwives recommends calling the health care provider if contractions are ≤5 minutes apart for more than 1 hour, several contractions are so painful that the woman cannot walk or talk, or her water breaks.8

A standard textbook describes normal uterine contractions during active labor as occurring every 2 to 5 minutes, and as often as every 2 to 3 minutes.9

EVIDENCE-BASED ANSWER

NO; HOWEVER, A REDUCTION IN the intercontraction interval is associated with active labor (strength of recommendation [SOR]: B, cohort study).

Most primigravidas who have had regular contractions for 2 hours and multigravidas who have had regular contractions for 1 hour haven’t transitioned into the active phase of labor (SOR: B, cohort study).

 

Evidence summary

Multiple cohort studies demonstrate that the expected events of normal labor form a bell-shaped curve. The range of labor experiences makes predicting when a particular woman will enter active labor difficult.

When does latent labor become active labor?

The first stage of labor includes latent and active phases. The latent phase is defined as the period between onset of labor and cervical dilatation of 3 to 4 cm or the time between onset of regular contractions and escalation in the rate of cervical dilation. Regular contractions must be intense, last 60 seconds, and occur in a predictable pattern. Escalating cervical dilation is marked by a change in the cervical examination over a short period of time (usually 2 hours).1

The World Health Organization defines active labor as cervical dilation between 4 and 9 cm, with dilation usually occurring at 1 cm per hour or faster and accompanied by the beginning of fetal descent.2

Latent labor was initially described in a large prospective cohort of 10,293 term gravidas (including 4175 nulliparas and 5599 multiparas) followed from presentation to delivery.1 Cervical dilation was assessed by examination every 30 to 120 minutes, almost always performed by the same examiner throughout labor. In primigravidas, latent labor averaged 6.4 hours, with 95% of women completing the latent phase in 20.6 hours. In multigravidas, the mean duration of latent labor was 4.8 hours, with 95% of women transitioning to active labor in 13.6 hours.

Shorter intercontraction interval linked to active labor

A recently published cohort study of women presenting to labor and delivery found that a relative decrease in the intercontraction interval was associated with a diagnosis of labor (odds ratio=1.42; 95% confidence interval, 1.06-1.90). The study failed to define either active labor or decrease in the intercontraction interval.3

Earlier admission leads to more interventions and poorer outcomes

Many studies have suggested that admitting women to the hospital during the latent phase of labor is associated with more interventions and poorer outcomes. Two large retrospective cohort studies (N=2697 and 3220) found increased rates of cesarean section in women admitted during the latent phase.4,5 They also reported increased use of oxytocin, epidural analgesia, intrauterine pressure catheters, and fetal scalp electrodes, and increased rates of chorioamnionitis, postpartum infection, and neonatal intubation.4,5 See the TABLE for a summary of the effects of latent-phase admission.

TABLE
Consequences of hospital admission during latent vs active labor

NulliparousParous
ConsequenceLatent (%)Active (%)NNHLatent (%)Active (%)NNH
Oxytocin4 43276*2099*
Epidural4 82615*58406*
Assisted vaginal delivery4 2725508650
Cesarean4 10417*8650
Cesarean5 14714*3150*
pH <7.14 4310032100
Apgar <74 425032100
NNH, number needed to harm.
*Indicates relationship significant at the level <.05.
†Study by Bailit5 also showed significant associations for oxytocin, scalp pH, intrauterine pressure catheter, fetal scalp electrode, epidural, neonatal intubation, amnionitis, and postpartum infection. Raw data are unavailable for abstraction
 

 

 

Labor assessment program reduced time in the labor ward

Labor assessment programs attempt to delay admission during early active labor. One randomized clinical trial (N=209) among low-risk women with reassuring maternal and fetal assessments in early labor divided the women into 2 groups when they presented for labor and delivery. One group received advice, encouragement, and support along with instructions to walk or return home and come back when labor became more active (defined as regular, painful contractions and dilation of at least 3 cm). The other group was admitted directly to the labor and delivery ward. The study found that early labor assessment decreased use of analgesics and oxytocin and reduced time spent in the labor ward.6

Recommendations

The American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG) acknowledges in patient education literature that distinguishing true from false labor is difficult. ACOG lists characteristics of each and recommend that a woman monitor the frequency of contractions for an hour and call the doctor’s office or hospital if she thinks she’s in labor.7

Similarly, a patient handout from the American College of Nurse-Midwives recommends calling the health care provider if contractions are ≤5 minutes apart for more than 1 hour, several contractions are so painful that the woman cannot walk or talk, or her water breaks.8

A standard textbook describes normal uterine contractions during active labor as occurring every 2 to 5 minutes, and as often as every 2 to 3 minutes.9

References

1. Friedman EA, Kroll BH. Computer analysis of labor progression. 3. Pattern variations by parity. J Reprod Med. 1971;6:179-183.

2. World Health Organization. Managing Complications in Pregnancy and Childbirth: A Guide for Midwives and Doctors. Geneva, Switzerland: Department of Reproductive Health and Research, Family and Community Health, World Health Organization; 2003.

3. Ragusa A, Monsur M, Zanini A, et al. Diagnosis of labor: a prospective study. Med Gen Med. 2005;7:61.-

4. Holmes P, Oppenheimer LW, Wen SW. The relationship between cervical dilatation at initial presentation in labour and subsequent intervention. BJOG. 2001;108:1120-1124.

5. Bailit JL, Dierker LR, Blanchard MH, et al. Outcomes of women presenting in active versus latent phase of spontaneous labor. Obstet Gynecol. 2005;105:77-79.

6. McNiven PS, Williams JI, Hodnett E, et al. An early labor assessment program: a randomized, controlled trial. Birth. 1998;25:5-10.

7. How to Tell When Labor Begins. Washington, DC: American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists; 1999. Available at: www.acog.org/publications/patient_education/bp004.cfm. Accessed November 8, 2008.

8. Am I in Labor? Silver Spring, Md: American College of Nurse-Midwives; 2003. Available at: www.midwife.org/siteFiles/news/sharewithwomen48_4.pdf. Accessed November 7, 2008.

9. Kilpatrick S, Garrison E. Normal labor and delivery. In: Gabbe SG, Niebyl JR, Simpson JL, eds. Obstetrics: Normal and Problem Pregnancies. 5th ed. Philadelphia: Churchill Livingstone/Elsevier; 2007:303–317.

References

1. Friedman EA, Kroll BH. Computer analysis of labor progression. 3. Pattern variations by parity. J Reprod Med. 1971;6:179-183.

2. World Health Organization. Managing Complications in Pregnancy and Childbirth: A Guide for Midwives and Doctors. Geneva, Switzerland: Department of Reproductive Health and Research, Family and Community Health, World Health Organization; 2003.

3. Ragusa A, Monsur M, Zanini A, et al. Diagnosis of labor: a prospective study. Med Gen Med. 2005;7:61.-

4. Holmes P, Oppenheimer LW, Wen SW. The relationship between cervical dilatation at initial presentation in labour and subsequent intervention. BJOG. 2001;108:1120-1124.

5. Bailit JL, Dierker LR, Blanchard MH, et al. Outcomes of women presenting in active versus latent phase of spontaneous labor. Obstet Gynecol. 2005;105:77-79.

6. McNiven PS, Williams JI, Hodnett E, et al. An early labor assessment program: a randomized, controlled trial. Birth. 1998;25:5-10.

7. How to Tell When Labor Begins. Washington, DC: American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists; 1999. Available at: www.acog.org/publications/patient_education/bp004.cfm. Accessed November 8, 2008.

8. Am I in Labor? Silver Spring, Md: American College of Nurse-Midwives; 2003. Available at: www.midwife.org/siteFiles/news/sharewithwomen48_4.pdf. Accessed November 7, 2008.

9. Kilpatrick S, Garrison E. Normal labor and delivery. In: Gabbe SG, Niebyl JR, Simpson JL, eds. Obstetrics: Normal and Problem Pregnancies. 5th ed. Philadelphia: Churchill Livingstone/Elsevier; 2007:303–317.

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Do intercontraction intervals predict when a woman at term should seek evaluation of labor?
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Which UTI therapies are safe and effective during breastfeeding?

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Which UTI therapies are safe and effective during breastfeeding?
EVIDENCE-BASED ANSWER

Trimethoprim/sulfamethoxazole (TMP/SMX) has a high success rate in eradicating bacteriuria for women with urinary tract infection and is compatible with breastfeeding (strength of recommendation: C, based on extrapolation from studies with nonlactating women and disease-oriented outcomes).

Quinolones (ciprofloxacin, ofloxacin) are effective and probably compatible with breastfeeding; however, their use has not been recommended by many investigators based on arthropathy in animal studies (SOR: C, based on extrapolation from case series and disease-oriented outcomes).

A 7-day course of nitrofurantoin has similar efficacy to TMP/SMX and is compatible with breastfeeding, but it should be avoided in populations at risk for glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PD) deficiency (also known as favism, most often found in patients of mediterranean or african descent) (SOR: C, extrapolation from studies in nonlactating women and disease-oriented outcomes).

Clinical commentary

An antibiotic that’s effective for mom and safe for baby is of paramount importance
Timothy Huber, MD
Oroville, Calif

Knowing the local resistance patterns can greatly aid in choosing a safe, effective antibiotic. Most local laboratories that do microbiology work either publish their antibiograms or make them available on a semiannual or annual basis. Keeping these readily available can be a time-saver when it comes to decision-making and writing a prescription.

 

Evidence summary

Urinary tract infections (UTIs) are common in reproductive-aged women. In lactating women, it’s important to select a therapy that is not only effective, but also safe for the breastfeeding infant. No studies in the literature address the safety or efficacy of UTI treatments in lactating women and their infants. Therefore, recommendations are extrapolated from studies of efficacy in the general population, studies of antibiotic penetration into breast milk, and effects of antibiotics given to infants directly.

How the efficacy of UTI treatments stack up

The best evidence for efficacy of UTI treatments comes from a 1999 meta-analysis of uncomplicated UTI in nonpregnant, nonlactating women.1 They found TMP/SMX to be the most widely studied antibiotic and to have a 93% bacterial eradication rate; it was therefore used as a standard for comparison of other treatments. Nitrofurantoin and quinolones (ofloxacin, ciprofloxacin, and others) had comparable eradication rates to TMP/SMX in the same study; 7-day courses of nitrofurantoin were more efficacious than shorter ones. TMP/SMX is not recommended if the local resistance rate is more than 10% to 20%.2

Three-day therapy for uncomplicated UTI is more effective than single-dose therapy and equal to longer courses for most antibiotics.1 A longer course (7 days) may be required for nitrofurantoin. Beta-lactams are associated with high levels of resistance and therefore not recommended in empiric treatment of UTI.2

A look at penetration into breast milk

Most of the data regarding antibiotic penetration into breast milk come from case series. One South African series measured breast milk levels of both trimethoprim and sulfamethoxazole among 50 Bantu women treated with TMP/SMX for various infections (including UTI).3 The women received 160 mg TMP and 800 mg SMX 2 or 3 times daily for up to 5 days. The average level of TMP in breast milk was 2 mcg/mL, and the level of SMX was 4.7 mcg/mL. Researchers calculated that the average breastfeeding infant would ingest only 1 mg of TMP and 2.5 mg of SMX per day. TMP/SMX is generally considered safe for infants in the absence of G6PD deficiency.

In a case series, 9 lactating mothers were given nitrofurantoin 100 mg orally every 6 hours for 1 day.4 On day 2, after a single 100 to 200 mg dose, drug levels in the breast milk 2 hours post-dose ranged from none (in 6 of the 9 women) to a maximum of 0.5 mcg/mL in one. Since even a very small amount of the drug may trigger a hemolytic reaction among G6PD-deficient individuals, the researchers called for caution when prescribing to mothers from high-risk populations.

 

 

 

A final case seriesadministered ciprofloxacin 750 mg, pefloxacin 400 mg, or ofloxacin 400 mg twice daily to 3 groups of 10 women each.5 Milk samples were obtained 6 times over 24 hours following the third dose of antibiotic. Maximum levels in breast milk occurred 2 hours after the dose, and were 3.79, 3.54, and 2.41 mcg/mL for ciprofloxacin, pefloxacin, and ofloxacin respectively. All 3 quinolones achieved higher concentrations in breast milk than in serum.

But are these drugs safe for children?

While TMP/SMX and nitrofurantoin are generally considered safe when given to infants and children (barring G6PD deficiency), data are mixed regarding the safety of quinolones. Ciprofloxacin’s FDA indication for pediatric patients is limited to postexposure anthrax prophylaxis due to evidence of fluoroquinolone-induced joint toxicity in animal studies.6 Despite this, they have been prescribed to tens of thousands of children for select scenarios such as chemotherapy-induced immuno-compromise, cystic fibrosis, complicated UTIs, and salmonella infections.7

A report was published summarizing safety data from the Bayer database of compassionate use of ciprofloxacin.8 The report indicates that 2030 treatment courses of ciprofloxacin were given to 1795 children up to age 17 for a variety of infections; only 3% were under age 5. Most patients received 21 to 40 mg/kg of ciprofloxacin per day; treatment duration was from 1 to 303 days. Arthralgia occurred in 1.5% of patients, most of whom had cystic fibrosis. Of the 31 patients affected, arthralgias resolved in 25, improved in 1, and remained unchanged in 1. (Data regarding resolution were unavailable for 4 patients.)

Recommendations from others

The American Academy of Pediatrics’ Committee on Drugsconsiders the following antibiotics typically used for UTI to be compatible with breastfeeding: ciprofloxacin, ofloxacin, nitrofurantoin (caution for infants with G6PD deficiency), and TMP/SMX.9

Drugs in Pregnancy and Lactation considers trimethoprim and sulfamethoxazole to be compatible with breastfeeding but cautions against sulfamethoxazole use in infants with known G6PD deficiency. The authors categorize nitrofurantoin, ciprofloxacin, and ofloxacin as “probably compatible/limited human data,” and advise caution with nitrofurantoin for infants with G6PD deficiency.10

References

1. Warren JW, Abrutyn J, Bebel R, et al. Guidelines for antimicrobial treatment of uncomplicated acute bacterial cystitis and acute pyelonephritis in women. Guidelines from the Infectious Diseases society of America. Clin Infect Dis 1999;29:745-758

2. Gupta K, Scholes D, Stamm WE. Increasing prevalence of antimicrobial resistance among uropathogens causing acute uncomplicated cystitis in women. JAMA 1999;281:736-758.

3. Miller RD, Salter AJ. The passage of trimethoprim/sulfamethoxazole into breast milk and its significance. Proceedings of the 8th International Congress of Chemotherapy, Athens. Hellenic Soc Chemother 1974;1:687-691.

4. Varsano I, Fischl J, Shochet S. The excretion of orally ingested nitrofurantoin in human milk [letter]. J Pediatr 1973;886-887.

5. Giamerellou H, Kolokythas E, Petrikkos G, et al. Pharmacokinetics of three newer quinolones in pregnant and lactating women. Am J Med 1989;87 (Suppl 5A):49s-51s.

6. Cipro package insert. West Haven, Conn: Bayer Pharmaceuticals Corporation; January 2004.

7. Grady R. Safety profile of quinolone antibiotics in the pediatric population. Pediatr Infect Dis J 2003;22:1128-1132.

8. Hampel B, Hullmann R, Schmidt H. Ciprofloxacin in pediatrics: worldwide clinical experience based on compassionate use-safety report. Pediatr Infect Dis J 1997;16:127-1209.

9. American Academy of Pediatrics Committee on Drugs. The transfer of drugs and other chemicals into human milk. Pediatrics 2001;108:776-789.

10. Briggs GG, Freeman RK, Yaffe SJ. Drugs during Pregnancy and Lactation. 7th ed. Baltimore, Md: Lippincott, Williams & Wilkins; 2005.

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Vanessa McPherson, MD
Leonora Kaufmann, MLIS
Carolinas Medical Center, Charlotte, NC

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UTI therapies; UTI; breastfeeding; Jessica Kaiser;MD; Vanessa McPherson;MD; Leonora Kaufmann;MLIS; Kaiser J; McPherson V; Kaufmann L; Timothy Huber;MD; Huber T; TMP/SMX; Trimethoprim/sulfamethoxazole; Trimethoprim; sulfamethoxazole; bacteriuria; quinolones; ciprofloxacin; ofloxacin; nitrofurantoin
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EVIDENCE-BASED ANSWER

Trimethoprim/sulfamethoxazole (TMP/SMX) has a high success rate in eradicating bacteriuria for women with urinary tract infection and is compatible with breastfeeding (strength of recommendation: C, based on extrapolation from studies with nonlactating women and disease-oriented outcomes).

Quinolones (ciprofloxacin, ofloxacin) are effective and probably compatible with breastfeeding; however, their use has not been recommended by many investigators based on arthropathy in animal studies (SOR: C, based on extrapolation from case series and disease-oriented outcomes).

A 7-day course of nitrofurantoin has similar efficacy to TMP/SMX and is compatible with breastfeeding, but it should be avoided in populations at risk for glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PD) deficiency (also known as favism, most often found in patients of mediterranean or african descent) (SOR: C, extrapolation from studies in nonlactating women and disease-oriented outcomes).

Clinical commentary

An antibiotic that’s effective for mom and safe for baby is of paramount importance
Timothy Huber, MD
Oroville, Calif

Knowing the local resistance patterns can greatly aid in choosing a safe, effective antibiotic. Most local laboratories that do microbiology work either publish their antibiograms or make them available on a semiannual or annual basis. Keeping these readily available can be a time-saver when it comes to decision-making and writing a prescription.

 

Evidence summary

Urinary tract infections (UTIs) are common in reproductive-aged women. In lactating women, it’s important to select a therapy that is not only effective, but also safe for the breastfeeding infant. No studies in the literature address the safety or efficacy of UTI treatments in lactating women and their infants. Therefore, recommendations are extrapolated from studies of efficacy in the general population, studies of antibiotic penetration into breast milk, and effects of antibiotics given to infants directly.

How the efficacy of UTI treatments stack up

The best evidence for efficacy of UTI treatments comes from a 1999 meta-analysis of uncomplicated UTI in nonpregnant, nonlactating women.1 They found TMP/SMX to be the most widely studied antibiotic and to have a 93% bacterial eradication rate; it was therefore used as a standard for comparison of other treatments. Nitrofurantoin and quinolones (ofloxacin, ciprofloxacin, and others) had comparable eradication rates to TMP/SMX in the same study; 7-day courses of nitrofurantoin were more efficacious than shorter ones. TMP/SMX is not recommended if the local resistance rate is more than 10% to 20%.2

Three-day therapy for uncomplicated UTI is more effective than single-dose therapy and equal to longer courses for most antibiotics.1 A longer course (7 days) may be required for nitrofurantoin. Beta-lactams are associated with high levels of resistance and therefore not recommended in empiric treatment of UTI.2

A look at penetration into breast milk

Most of the data regarding antibiotic penetration into breast milk come from case series. One South African series measured breast milk levels of both trimethoprim and sulfamethoxazole among 50 Bantu women treated with TMP/SMX for various infections (including UTI).3 The women received 160 mg TMP and 800 mg SMX 2 or 3 times daily for up to 5 days. The average level of TMP in breast milk was 2 mcg/mL, and the level of SMX was 4.7 mcg/mL. Researchers calculated that the average breastfeeding infant would ingest only 1 mg of TMP and 2.5 mg of SMX per day. TMP/SMX is generally considered safe for infants in the absence of G6PD deficiency.

In a case series, 9 lactating mothers were given nitrofurantoin 100 mg orally every 6 hours for 1 day.4 On day 2, after a single 100 to 200 mg dose, drug levels in the breast milk 2 hours post-dose ranged from none (in 6 of the 9 women) to a maximum of 0.5 mcg/mL in one. Since even a very small amount of the drug may trigger a hemolytic reaction among G6PD-deficient individuals, the researchers called for caution when prescribing to mothers from high-risk populations.

 

 

 

A final case seriesadministered ciprofloxacin 750 mg, pefloxacin 400 mg, or ofloxacin 400 mg twice daily to 3 groups of 10 women each.5 Milk samples were obtained 6 times over 24 hours following the third dose of antibiotic. Maximum levels in breast milk occurred 2 hours after the dose, and were 3.79, 3.54, and 2.41 mcg/mL for ciprofloxacin, pefloxacin, and ofloxacin respectively. All 3 quinolones achieved higher concentrations in breast milk than in serum.

But are these drugs safe for children?

While TMP/SMX and nitrofurantoin are generally considered safe when given to infants and children (barring G6PD deficiency), data are mixed regarding the safety of quinolones. Ciprofloxacin’s FDA indication for pediatric patients is limited to postexposure anthrax prophylaxis due to evidence of fluoroquinolone-induced joint toxicity in animal studies.6 Despite this, they have been prescribed to tens of thousands of children for select scenarios such as chemotherapy-induced immuno-compromise, cystic fibrosis, complicated UTIs, and salmonella infections.7

A report was published summarizing safety data from the Bayer database of compassionate use of ciprofloxacin.8 The report indicates that 2030 treatment courses of ciprofloxacin were given to 1795 children up to age 17 for a variety of infections; only 3% were under age 5. Most patients received 21 to 40 mg/kg of ciprofloxacin per day; treatment duration was from 1 to 303 days. Arthralgia occurred in 1.5% of patients, most of whom had cystic fibrosis. Of the 31 patients affected, arthralgias resolved in 25, improved in 1, and remained unchanged in 1. (Data regarding resolution were unavailable for 4 patients.)

Recommendations from others

The American Academy of Pediatrics’ Committee on Drugsconsiders the following antibiotics typically used for UTI to be compatible with breastfeeding: ciprofloxacin, ofloxacin, nitrofurantoin (caution for infants with G6PD deficiency), and TMP/SMX.9

Drugs in Pregnancy and Lactation considers trimethoprim and sulfamethoxazole to be compatible with breastfeeding but cautions against sulfamethoxazole use in infants with known G6PD deficiency. The authors categorize nitrofurantoin, ciprofloxacin, and ofloxacin as “probably compatible/limited human data,” and advise caution with nitrofurantoin for infants with G6PD deficiency.10

EVIDENCE-BASED ANSWER

Trimethoprim/sulfamethoxazole (TMP/SMX) has a high success rate in eradicating bacteriuria for women with urinary tract infection and is compatible with breastfeeding (strength of recommendation: C, based on extrapolation from studies with nonlactating women and disease-oriented outcomes).

Quinolones (ciprofloxacin, ofloxacin) are effective and probably compatible with breastfeeding; however, their use has not been recommended by many investigators based on arthropathy in animal studies (SOR: C, based on extrapolation from case series and disease-oriented outcomes).

A 7-day course of nitrofurantoin has similar efficacy to TMP/SMX and is compatible with breastfeeding, but it should be avoided in populations at risk for glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PD) deficiency (also known as favism, most often found in patients of mediterranean or african descent) (SOR: C, extrapolation from studies in nonlactating women and disease-oriented outcomes).

Clinical commentary

An antibiotic that’s effective for mom and safe for baby is of paramount importance
Timothy Huber, MD
Oroville, Calif

Knowing the local resistance patterns can greatly aid in choosing a safe, effective antibiotic. Most local laboratories that do microbiology work either publish their antibiograms or make them available on a semiannual or annual basis. Keeping these readily available can be a time-saver when it comes to decision-making and writing a prescription.

 

Evidence summary

Urinary tract infections (UTIs) are common in reproductive-aged women. In lactating women, it’s important to select a therapy that is not only effective, but also safe for the breastfeeding infant. No studies in the literature address the safety or efficacy of UTI treatments in lactating women and their infants. Therefore, recommendations are extrapolated from studies of efficacy in the general population, studies of antibiotic penetration into breast milk, and effects of antibiotics given to infants directly.

How the efficacy of UTI treatments stack up

The best evidence for efficacy of UTI treatments comes from a 1999 meta-analysis of uncomplicated UTI in nonpregnant, nonlactating women.1 They found TMP/SMX to be the most widely studied antibiotic and to have a 93% bacterial eradication rate; it was therefore used as a standard for comparison of other treatments. Nitrofurantoin and quinolones (ofloxacin, ciprofloxacin, and others) had comparable eradication rates to TMP/SMX in the same study; 7-day courses of nitrofurantoin were more efficacious than shorter ones. TMP/SMX is not recommended if the local resistance rate is more than 10% to 20%.2

Three-day therapy for uncomplicated UTI is more effective than single-dose therapy and equal to longer courses for most antibiotics.1 A longer course (7 days) may be required for nitrofurantoin. Beta-lactams are associated with high levels of resistance and therefore not recommended in empiric treatment of UTI.2

A look at penetration into breast milk

Most of the data regarding antibiotic penetration into breast milk come from case series. One South African series measured breast milk levels of both trimethoprim and sulfamethoxazole among 50 Bantu women treated with TMP/SMX for various infections (including UTI).3 The women received 160 mg TMP and 800 mg SMX 2 or 3 times daily for up to 5 days. The average level of TMP in breast milk was 2 mcg/mL, and the level of SMX was 4.7 mcg/mL. Researchers calculated that the average breastfeeding infant would ingest only 1 mg of TMP and 2.5 mg of SMX per day. TMP/SMX is generally considered safe for infants in the absence of G6PD deficiency.

In a case series, 9 lactating mothers were given nitrofurantoin 100 mg orally every 6 hours for 1 day.4 On day 2, after a single 100 to 200 mg dose, drug levels in the breast milk 2 hours post-dose ranged from none (in 6 of the 9 women) to a maximum of 0.5 mcg/mL in one. Since even a very small amount of the drug may trigger a hemolytic reaction among G6PD-deficient individuals, the researchers called for caution when prescribing to mothers from high-risk populations.

 

 

 

A final case seriesadministered ciprofloxacin 750 mg, pefloxacin 400 mg, or ofloxacin 400 mg twice daily to 3 groups of 10 women each.5 Milk samples were obtained 6 times over 24 hours following the third dose of antibiotic. Maximum levels in breast milk occurred 2 hours after the dose, and were 3.79, 3.54, and 2.41 mcg/mL for ciprofloxacin, pefloxacin, and ofloxacin respectively. All 3 quinolones achieved higher concentrations in breast milk than in serum.

But are these drugs safe for children?

While TMP/SMX and nitrofurantoin are generally considered safe when given to infants and children (barring G6PD deficiency), data are mixed regarding the safety of quinolones. Ciprofloxacin’s FDA indication for pediatric patients is limited to postexposure anthrax prophylaxis due to evidence of fluoroquinolone-induced joint toxicity in animal studies.6 Despite this, they have been prescribed to tens of thousands of children for select scenarios such as chemotherapy-induced immuno-compromise, cystic fibrosis, complicated UTIs, and salmonella infections.7

A report was published summarizing safety data from the Bayer database of compassionate use of ciprofloxacin.8 The report indicates that 2030 treatment courses of ciprofloxacin were given to 1795 children up to age 17 for a variety of infections; only 3% were under age 5. Most patients received 21 to 40 mg/kg of ciprofloxacin per day; treatment duration was from 1 to 303 days. Arthralgia occurred in 1.5% of patients, most of whom had cystic fibrosis. Of the 31 patients affected, arthralgias resolved in 25, improved in 1, and remained unchanged in 1. (Data regarding resolution were unavailable for 4 patients.)

Recommendations from others

The American Academy of Pediatrics’ Committee on Drugsconsiders the following antibiotics typically used for UTI to be compatible with breastfeeding: ciprofloxacin, ofloxacin, nitrofurantoin (caution for infants with G6PD deficiency), and TMP/SMX.9

Drugs in Pregnancy and Lactation considers trimethoprim and sulfamethoxazole to be compatible with breastfeeding but cautions against sulfamethoxazole use in infants with known G6PD deficiency. The authors categorize nitrofurantoin, ciprofloxacin, and ofloxacin as “probably compatible/limited human data,” and advise caution with nitrofurantoin for infants with G6PD deficiency.10

References

1. Warren JW, Abrutyn J, Bebel R, et al. Guidelines for antimicrobial treatment of uncomplicated acute bacterial cystitis and acute pyelonephritis in women. Guidelines from the Infectious Diseases society of America. Clin Infect Dis 1999;29:745-758

2. Gupta K, Scholes D, Stamm WE. Increasing prevalence of antimicrobial resistance among uropathogens causing acute uncomplicated cystitis in women. JAMA 1999;281:736-758.

3. Miller RD, Salter AJ. The passage of trimethoprim/sulfamethoxazole into breast milk and its significance. Proceedings of the 8th International Congress of Chemotherapy, Athens. Hellenic Soc Chemother 1974;1:687-691.

4. Varsano I, Fischl J, Shochet S. The excretion of orally ingested nitrofurantoin in human milk [letter]. J Pediatr 1973;886-887.

5. Giamerellou H, Kolokythas E, Petrikkos G, et al. Pharmacokinetics of three newer quinolones in pregnant and lactating women. Am J Med 1989;87 (Suppl 5A):49s-51s.

6. Cipro package insert. West Haven, Conn: Bayer Pharmaceuticals Corporation; January 2004.

7. Grady R. Safety profile of quinolone antibiotics in the pediatric population. Pediatr Infect Dis J 2003;22:1128-1132.

8. Hampel B, Hullmann R, Schmidt H. Ciprofloxacin in pediatrics: worldwide clinical experience based on compassionate use-safety report. Pediatr Infect Dis J 1997;16:127-1209.

9. American Academy of Pediatrics Committee on Drugs. The transfer of drugs and other chemicals into human milk. Pediatrics 2001;108:776-789.

10. Briggs GG, Freeman RK, Yaffe SJ. Drugs during Pregnancy and Lactation. 7th ed. Baltimore, Md: Lippincott, Williams & Wilkins; 2005.

References

1. Warren JW, Abrutyn J, Bebel R, et al. Guidelines for antimicrobial treatment of uncomplicated acute bacterial cystitis and acute pyelonephritis in women. Guidelines from the Infectious Diseases society of America. Clin Infect Dis 1999;29:745-758

2. Gupta K, Scholes D, Stamm WE. Increasing prevalence of antimicrobial resistance among uropathogens causing acute uncomplicated cystitis in women. JAMA 1999;281:736-758.

3. Miller RD, Salter AJ. The passage of trimethoprim/sulfamethoxazole into breast milk and its significance. Proceedings of the 8th International Congress of Chemotherapy, Athens. Hellenic Soc Chemother 1974;1:687-691.

4. Varsano I, Fischl J, Shochet S. The excretion of orally ingested nitrofurantoin in human milk [letter]. J Pediatr 1973;886-887.

5. Giamerellou H, Kolokythas E, Petrikkos G, et al. Pharmacokinetics of three newer quinolones in pregnant and lactating women. Am J Med 1989;87 (Suppl 5A):49s-51s.

6. Cipro package insert. West Haven, Conn: Bayer Pharmaceuticals Corporation; January 2004.

7. Grady R. Safety profile of quinolone antibiotics in the pediatric population. Pediatr Infect Dis J 2003;22:1128-1132.

8. Hampel B, Hullmann R, Schmidt H. Ciprofloxacin in pediatrics: worldwide clinical experience based on compassionate use-safety report. Pediatr Infect Dis J 1997;16:127-1209.

9. American Academy of Pediatrics Committee on Drugs. The transfer of drugs and other chemicals into human milk. Pediatrics 2001;108:776-789.

10. Briggs GG, Freeman RK, Yaffe SJ. Drugs during Pregnancy and Lactation. 7th ed. Baltimore, Md: Lippincott, Williams & Wilkins; 2005.

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What is the best treatment for gastroesophageal reflux and vomiting in infants?

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EVIDENCE-BASED ANSWER

The literature on pediatric reflux can be divided into studies addressing clinically apparent reflux (vomiting or regurgitation) and reflux as measured by pH probe or other methods (TABLES 1 AND 2). Sodium alginate reduces vomiting and improves parents’ assessment of symptoms (strength of recommendation [SOR]: B, small randomized controlled trial [RCT]). Formula thickened with rice cereal decreases the number of postprandial emesis episodes in infants with gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD) (SOR: B, small RCT).

There are conflicting data on the effect of carob bean gum as a formula thickener and its effect on regurgitation frequency (SOR: B, small RCTs). Metoclopramide does not affect vomiting or regurgitation, but is associated with greater weight gain in infants over 3 months with reflux (SOR: B, low-quality RCTs).

Carob bean gum used as a formula thickener decreases reflux as measured by intraluminal impedance but not as measured by pH probe (SOR: B, RCT). Omeprazole and metoclopramide each improve the reflux index as measured by esophageal pH probe (SOR: B, RCT).

Evidence is conflicting for other commonly used conservative measures (such as positional changes) or other medications for symptomatic relief of infant GERD. There is very limited evidence or expert opinion regarding breastfed infants, particularly with regard to preservation of breastfeeding during therapy.

TABLE 1
Interventions that affect vomiting or regurgitation

INTERVENTIONTRIAL DESCRIPTIONEFFECT
Carob bean gum*Unblinded crossover RCT (n=14 infants w/regurgitation). Reflux episodes measured by intraluminal impedance and visual regurgitation score.5Improved.
0.4 g/100 ccCarob bean gum: 15 regurgitations/342 hrs.
Standard formula: 68
P<.0003
RCT, thickened vs. standard formula (n=20).No improvement.
Outcome: regurgitation score, parental diary.6Thickened formula: 2.2≠ 1.92 regurgitation score. Control formula: 3.3≠ 1.16.
P=.14
Crossover RCT (n=24). Formula thickened with carob bean gum vs rice cereal.Improved.
Outcomes: symptom scores and emesis episodes.7Both groups showed improved symptom scores and decreased emesis, but carob bean gum was superior to rice cereal-thickened formula.
Sodium alginateDouble-blind multicenter RCT of alginate vs placebo added to formula or breast milk (n=88). Intention-to-treat analysis.9Improved.
225 mg/115 ccFunded by manufacturer. 25% dropout rate. Breastfed infants included, but results not reported separately.Alginate: from 8.5 vomiting/regurgitation episodes to 3 per 24 h.
orPlacebo: from 7 episodes to 5 per 24 h.
450 mg/225 ccP=.009
Rice cerealRCT of thickened vs unthickened formula (n=20). Emesis episodes per 90-min postprandial period.4Improved.
(see also Carob emesis bean gum, above)Thickened formula: 1.2 +/- 0.7 episodes per 90 minutes postprandial
Placebo: 3.9 +/- 0.9 emesis episodes
P=0.015
MetoclopramideCrossover RCT (n=30). Metoclopramide vs placebo for 7 days. Mean daily symptom count (included vomiting and regurgitation).10No improvement.
0.1 mg/kg 4 times dailyPlacebo: Symptom count for
Placebo 6.5 1.3 per day
Metoclopramide 5.6 1.2
P=.19
Subgroup analysis infants >3 mo showed greater weight gain for treated infants.
*Used in the UK (Instant Carobel); not widely available in US
†Available in UK as Gaviscon Infant.

TABLE 2
Interventions that affect pH probe/measured reflux

INTERVENTIONDESCRIPTIONEFFECT
Carob bean gum*Unblinded crossover RCT (n=14 infants w/regurgitation). Reflux episodes measured by intraluminal impedance and visual regurgitation score. Limitations: unblinded; small sample size; no breastfed infants included.5Improved.
0.4 g/100 ccCarob bean gum: 536 episodes in 342 hours. Placebo: 647 episodes. P<.02
RCT, thickened vs standard formula.No improvement.
Reflux meas. by 24-h pH probe.6Reflux index for thickened formula, 11.1 ± 6.1. Standard formula, 13.2 ± 4.7. P=.41
Rice cerealRCT of thickened vs unthickened formulaNo improvement. Thickened formula group:
(n=20). Reflux measured by scintigraphy.426.8 ± 5.8 episodes per 90 min postprandial period. Unthickened formula group: 27.9 ± 4.0. P=NS.
Infant seat at 60°RCT, positioning in infant seat vs prone.Worsened. Infant seat: 16 ± 2.4 episodes
Episodes of reflux measured by pH probe.3in 2 h. Prone position: 10 ± 2.3 episodes.
P=.002
Head of bed at 30°Crossover RCT (n=90). Prone position vs prone/head of bed elevated to 30°. Number and length of reflux episodes, measured by pH probe.8No improvement. Head-elevated 6.2 ± 0.6 episodes per 2 h. Flat prone 7.8 ± 0.8 episodes per 2 h. P=NS.
Head-elevated 17.1 ± 2.4 minutes longest episode. Flat prone 17.9 ± 2.2 minutes. P=NS.
Pacifier useRCT (n=48). Seated vs prone position, with or without pacifier; reflux episodes meas. by pH probe.3Prone: Worsened from 7.2 ± 1.1 episodes in 2 h without pacifier to 12.8 ± 2.3 w/pacifier. P=.04.
OmeprazoleRCT (n=30 irritable infants with reflux or esophagitis). Reflux index (% of time pH <4) meas. by pH probe and “cry/fuss time.”11Irritability unchanged. Improved pH:
(Infants 5–10 kg: 10 mg/d; infants >10 kg: 10 mg bid)Omeprazole: Reflux index –8.9% ± 5.6.
Placebo: Reflux Index –1.9% ± 2. P<.001.
MetoclopramideCrossover RCT (n=30). Metoclopramide vs placebo for 7 days. Reflux index measured by pH probe. Wide confidence intervals.10Improved reflux index. Metoclopramide:
(0.1 mg/kg 4 times daily)10.3% (95% CI, 2.4–22.8). Placebo: 13.4% (95% CI, 2.8–30.5). P<.001

Evidence summary

Regurgitation (“spitting up”) and gastroesophageal reflux are common in infants. In a cross-sectional survey of 948 parents of healthy infants aged 0 to 13 months, regurgitation occurred daily in half of infants from birth to 3 months old, peaked to 67% at age 4 months, and was absent in 95% by age 12 months.1 Gastroesophageal disease (GERD) is characterized by refractory symptoms or complications (pain, irritability, vomiting, failure to thrive, dysphagia, respiratory symptoms, or esophagitis) and occurs in the minority of infants with reflux.2 This distinguishes the “happy spitter,” whose parents may simply require reassurance, from infants who require treatment.

 

 

 

Unfortunately, most of the available studies do not make this distinction in their subjects. Also, available data primarily regard formula-fed infants, and are insufficient to make recommendations for breastfed infants. Esophageal pH probe monitoring is the gold standard for measuring reflux in research; however, its correlation with symptoms is questionable and it is infrequently used in clinical practice.3 Therefore, recommendations are focused primarily on treating only clinically-evident reflux (emesis and regurgitation).

Five small RCTs studied the practice of using formula thickeners (TABLES 1 AND 2). In 1 study, formula thickened with rice cereal decreased emesis episodes.4 Two studies of carob bean gum–thickened formula vs plain formula yielded conflicting results.5,6 In the study showing improvement with carob bean gum, the parents were not blinded to the treatment, which may have led to bias favoring the treatment.5 An uncontrolled, comparative trial of carob bean gum vs rice cereal suggested superiority of carob bean gum as a thickener, although both treatments yielded improvement.7 Carob bean gum is available in the UK as a powder (Instant Carobel) but is not widely available in the US.

Three trials studied the effects of other conservative therapies such as positional changes and pacifiers on reflux measured by pH probe; unfortunately, none assessed clinical outcomes such as emesis or regurgitation.3 Reflux by pH probe was worsened in a trial studying the infant seat for positioning. In the trial studying elevating the head of the bed to 30° in the prone position, reflux measured by pH probe was also unchanged; prone positioning is no longer recommended due to the risk of Sudden Infant Death Syndrome (SIDS).8 The trial of pacifier use showed improvement of reflux by pH probe when used in the seated position, but worsening in the prone position. Since pH probe does not necessarily reflect clinical symptoms, the utility of the information from these studies is limited.

Only 1 trial of drugs used to treat infant reflux measured clinical symptoms. This large manufacturer-sponsored RCT found that sodium alginate9 significantly reduced emesis episodes in treated infants. Sodium alginate is marketed in the UK as Gaviscon Infant. While this trial included breastfed infants, it did not report the numbers of breastfed infants in the 2 treatment groups or present data separately for breastfed infants. Small RCTs of metoclopramide10 and omeprazole11 show significant improvement in reflux index measured by pH probe. However, metoclopramide yielded no improvement in symptom counts, and the omeprazole study resulted in no differences in “cry-fuss time” between treatment groups.

Recommendations from others

The North American Society for Pediatric Gastroenterology and Nutrition recommends thickening agents or a trial of hypoallergenic formula for vomiting infants.2 They caution against prone positioning and favor proton pump inhibitors over H2 blockers for symptomatic relief and healing of esophagitis. They found insufficient evidence to recommend surgery over medication.

Clinical Commentary

Lack of age-appropriate RCTs make evidence-based treatment difficult
Alfreda L. Bell, MD
Kelsey-Seybold Clinic, Houston, Tex

Gastroesophageal reflux, defined as the passage of gastric contents into the esophagus, is one of the most common gastroesophageal problems in infants. GERD is a pathological process in infants manifested by poor weight gain, signs of esophagitis, persistent respiratory symptoms or complications, and changes in neurologic behavior. Gastroesophageal reflux generally resolves within the first year of life, as the lower esophageal sphincter mechanism matures. Traditionally, these infants have been managed conservatively with feeding schedule modifications, thickened feeds, changes in positions after feeding, and formula changes. Depending on the history and clinical presentation of an infant with GERD, more detailed evaluation and treatment may be necessary.

As per the North American Society for Pediatric Gastroenterology and Nutrition, if an upper gastrointestinal series has ruled out anatomic causes of gastroesophageal reflux, and nonpharmacologic interventions have failed, an acid suppressive agent is usually the first line of therapy. The lack of age-appropriate case definitions and randomized controlled trials, however, make it difficult for those practitioners who treat infants to have a evidence-based protocol for managing GERD.

References

1. Nelson SP, Chen EH,, Syniar GM, Christoffel KK. Prevalence of symptoms of gastroesophageal reflux during infancy. A pediatric practice-based survey. Pediatric Practice Research Group. Arch Pediatr Adolesc Med 1997;151:569-572.

2. Rudolph CD, Mazur LJ, Liptak GS, et al. North American Society for Pediatric Gastroenterology and Nutrition. Guidelines for evaluation and treatment of gastroesophageal reflux in infants and children: Recommendations of the North American Society for Pediatric Gastroenterology and Nutrition. J Pediatr Gastroenterol Nutr 2001;32 Suppl 2:S1-S31.

3. Carroll AE, Garrison MM, Christakis DA. A systematic review of nonpharmacological and nonsurgical therapies for gastroesophageal reflux in infants. Arch Pediatr Adolesc Med 2002;156:109-113.

4. Orenstein SR, Magill HL, Brooks P. Thickening of infant feedings for therapy of gastroesophageal reflux. J Pediatr 1987;110:181-186.

5. Wenzl TG, Schneider S, Scheele F, Silny J, Heimann G, Skopnik H. Effects of thickened feeding on gastroesophageal reflux in infants: a placebo-controlled crossover study using intraluminal impedance. Pediatrics 2003;111(4 Pt 1):e355-359.

6. Vandemplas Y, Hachimi-Idrissi S, Casteels A, Mahler T, Loeb. A clinical trial with an “anti-regurgitation” formula. Eur J Pediatr 1994;153:419-423.

7. Borelli O, Salvia G, Campanozzi A. Use of a new thickened formula for treatment of symptomatic gastroesophageal reflux in infants. Ital J Gastroenterol Hepatol 1997;29:237-242.

8. Orenstein SR. Prone positioning in infant gastroesophageal reflux: Is elevation of the head worth the trouble? J Pediatr 1990;117:184-187.

9. Miller S. Comparison of the efficacy and safety of a new aluminum-free paediatric alginate preparation and placebo in infants with recurrent gastro-oesophageal reflux. Curr Med Res Opin 1999;15:160-168.

10. olia V, Calhoun J, Kuhns L, Kauffman RE. Randomized, prospective double-blind trial of metoclopramide and placebo for gastroesophageal reflux in infants. J Pediatr 1989;115:141-145.

11. Moore DJ, Tao BS, Lines DR, Hirte C, Heddle ML, Davidson GP. Double-blind placebo-controlled trial of omeprazole in irritable infants with gastroesophageal reflux. J Pediatr 2003;143:219-223.

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Carolinas Medical Center and University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill, Charlotte, NC

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EVIDENCE-BASED ANSWER

The literature on pediatric reflux can be divided into studies addressing clinically apparent reflux (vomiting or regurgitation) and reflux as measured by pH probe or other methods (TABLES 1 AND 2). Sodium alginate reduces vomiting and improves parents’ assessment of symptoms (strength of recommendation [SOR]: B, small randomized controlled trial [RCT]). Formula thickened with rice cereal decreases the number of postprandial emesis episodes in infants with gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD) (SOR: B, small RCT).

There are conflicting data on the effect of carob bean gum as a formula thickener and its effect on regurgitation frequency (SOR: B, small RCTs). Metoclopramide does not affect vomiting or regurgitation, but is associated with greater weight gain in infants over 3 months with reflux (SOR: B, low-quality RCTs).

Carob bean gum used as a formula thickener decreases reflux as measured by intraluminal impedance but not as measured by pH probe (SOR: B, RCT). Omeprazole and metoclopramide each improve the reflux index as measured by esophageal pH probe (SOR: B, RCT).

Evidence is conflicting for other commonly used conservative measures (such as positional changes) or other medications for symptomatic relief of infant GERD. There is very limited evidence or expert opinion regarding breastfed infants, particularly with regard to preservation of breastfeeding during therapy.

TABLE 1
Interventions that affect vomiting or regurgitation

INTERVENTIONTRIAL DESCRIPTIONEFFECT
Carob bean gum*Unblinded crossover RCT (n=14 infants w/regurgitation). Reflux episodes measured by intraluminal impedance and visual regurgitation score.5Improved.
0.4 g/100 ccCarob bean gum: 15 regurgitations/342 hrs.
Standard formula: 68
P<.0003
RCT, thickened vs. standard formula (n=20).No improvement.
Outcome: regurgitation score, parental diary.6Thickened formula: 2.2≠ 1.92 regurgitation score. Control formula: 3.3≠ 1.16.
P=.14
Crossover RCT (n=24). Formula thickened with carob bean gum vs rice cereal.Improved.
Outcomes: symptom scores and emesis episodes.7Both groups showed improved symptom scores and decreased emesis, but carob bean gum was superior to rice cereal-thickened formula.
Sodium alginateDouble-blind multicenter RCT of alginate vs placebo added to formula or breast milk (n=88). Intention-to-treat analysis.9Improved.
225 mg/115 ccFunded by manufacturer. 25% dropout rate. Breastfed infants included, but results not reported separately.Alginate: from 8.5 vomiting/regurgitation episodes to 3 per 24 h.
orPlacebo: from 7 episodes to 5 per 24 h.
450 mg/225 ccP=.009
Rice cerealRCT of thickened vs unthickened formula (n=20). Emesis episodes per 90-min postprandial period.4Improved.
(see also Carob emesis bean gum, above)Thickened formula: 1.2 +/- 0.7 episodes per 90 minutes postprandial
Placebo: 3.9 +/- 0.9 emesis episodes
P=0.015
MetoclopramideCrossover RCT (n=30). Metoclopramide vs placebo for 7 days. Mean daily symptom count (included vomiting and regurgitation).10No improvement.
0.1 mg/kg 4 times dailyPlacebo: Symptom count for
Placebo 6.5 1.3 per day
Metoclopramide 5.6 1.2
P=.19
Subgroup analysis infants >3 mo showed greater weight gain for treated infants.
*Used in the UK (Instant Carobel); not widely available in US
†Available in UK as Gaviscon Infant.

TABLE 2
Interventions that affect pH probe/measured reflux

INTERVENTIONDESCRIPTIONEFFECT
Carob bean gum*Unblinded crossover RCT (n=14 infants w/regurgitation). Reflux episodes measured by intraluminal impedance and visual regurgitation score. Limitations: unblinded; small sample size; no breastfed infants included.5Improved.
0.4 g/100 ccCarob bean gum: 536 episodes in 342 hours. Placebo: 647 episodes. P<.02
RCT, thickened vs standard formula.No improvement.
Reflux meas. by 24-h pH probe.6Reflux index for thickened formula, 11.1 ± 6.1. Standard formula, 13.2 ± 4.7. P=.41
Rice cerealRCT of thickened vs unthickened formulaNo improvement. Thickened formula group:
(n=20). Reflux measured by scintigraphy.426.8 ± 5.8 episodes per 90 min postprandial period. Unthickened formula group: 27.9 ± 4.0. P=NS.
Infant seat at 60°RCT, positioning in infant seat vs prone.Worsened. Infant seat: 16 ± 2.4 episodes
Episodes of reflux measured by pH probe.3in 2 h. Prone position: 10 ± 2.3 episodes.
P=.002
Head of bed at 30°Crossover RCT (n=90). Prone position vs prone/head of bed elevated to 30°. Number and length of reflux episodes, measured by pH probe.8No improvement. Head-elevated 6.2 ± 0.6 episodes per 2 h. Flat prone 7.8 ± 0.8 episodes per 2 h. P=NS.
Head-elevated 17.1 ± 2.4 minutes longest episode. Flat prone 17.9 ± 2.2 minutes. P=NS.
Pacifier useRCT (n=48). Seated vs prone position, with or without pacifier; reflux episodes meas. by pH probe.3Prone: Worsened from 7.2 ± 1.1 episodes in 2 h without pacifier to 12.8 ± 2.3 w/pacifier. P=.04.
OmeprazoleRCT (n=30 irritable infants with reflux or esophagitis). Reflux index (% of time pH <4) meas. by pH probe and “cry/fuss time.”11Irritability unchanged. Improved pH:
(Infants 5–10 kg: 10 mg/d; infants >10 kg: 10 mg bid)Omeprazole: Reflux index –8.9% ± 5.6.
Placebo: Reflux Index –1.9% ± 2. P<.001.
MetoclopramideCrossover RCT (n=30). Metoclopramide vs placebo for 7 days. Reflux index measured by pH probe. Wide confidence intervals.10Improved reflux index. Metoclopramide:
(0.1 mg/kg 4 times daily)10.3% (95% CI, 2.4–22.8). Placebo: 13.4% (95% CI, 2.8–30.5). P<.001

Evidence summary

Regurgitation (“spitting up”) and gastroesophageal reflux are common in infants. In a cross-sectional survey of 948 parents of healthy infants aged 0 to 13 months, regurgitation occurred daily in half of infants from birth to 3 months old, peaked to 67% at age 4 months, and was absent in 95% by age 12 months.1 Gastroesophageal disease (GERD) is characterized by refractory symptoms or complications (pain, irritability, vomiting, failure to thrive, dysphagia, respiratory symptoms, or esophagitis) and occurs in the minority of infants with reflux.2 This distinguishes the “happy spitter,” whose parents may simply require reassurance, from infants who require treatment.

 

 

 

Unfortunately, most of the available studies do not make this distinction in their subjects. Also, available data primarily regard formula-fed infants, and are insufficient to make recommendations for breastfed infants. Esophageal pH probe monitoring is the gold standard for measuring reflux in research; however, its correlation with symptoms is questionable and it is infrequently used in clinical practice.3 Therefore, recommendations are focused primarily on treating only clinically-evident reflux (emesis and regurgitation).

Five small RCTs studied the practice of using formula thickeners (TABLES 1 AND 2). In 1 study, formula thickened with rice cereal decreased emesis episodes.4 Two studies of carob bean gum–thickened formula vs plain formula yielded conflicting results.5,6 In the study showing improvement with carob bean gum, the parents were not blinded to the treatment, which may have led to bias favoring the treatment.5 An uncontrolled, comparative trial of carob bean gum vs rice cereal suggested superiority of carob bean gum as a thickener, although both treatments yielded improvement.7 Carob bean gum is available in the UK as a powder (Instant Carobel) but is not widely available in the US.

Three trials studied the effects of other conservative therapies such as positional changes and pacifiers on reflux measured by pH probe; unfortunately, none assessed clinical outcomes such as emesis or regurgitation.3 Reflux by pH probe was worsened in a trial studying the infant seat for positioning. In the trial studying elevating the head of the bed to 30° in the prone position, reflux measured by pH probe was also unchanged; prone positioning is no longer recommended due to the risk of Sudden Infant Death Syndrome (SIDS).8 The trial of pacifier use showed improvement of reflux by pH probe when used in the seated position, but worsening in the prone position. Since pH probe does not necessarily reflect clinical symptoms, the utility of the information from these studies is limited.

Only 1 trial of drugs used to treat infant reflux measured clinical symptoms. This large manufacturer-sponsored RCT found that sodium alginate9 significantly reduced emesis episodes in treated infants. Sodium alginate is marketed in the UK as Gaviscon Infant. While this trial included breastfed infants, it did not report the numbers of breastfed infants in the 2 treatment groups or present data separately for breastfed infants. Small RCTs of metoclopramide10 and omeprazole11 show significant improvement in reflux index measured by pH probe. However, metoclopramide yielded no improvement in symptom counts, and the omeprazole study resulted in no differences in “cry-fuss time” between treatment groups.

Recommendations from others

The North American Society for Pediatric Gastroenterology and Nutrition recommends thickening agents or a trial of hypoallergenic formula for vomiting infants.2 They caution against prone positioning and favor proton pump inhibitors over H2 blockers for symptomatic relief and healing of esophagitis. They found insufficient evidence to recommend surgery over medication.

Clinical Commentary

Lack of age-appropriate RCTs make evidence-based treatment difficult
Alfreda L. Bell, MD
Kelsey-Seybold Clinic, Houston, Tex

Gastroesophageal reflux, defined as the passage of gastric contents into the esophagus, is one of the most common gastroesophageal problems in infants. GERD is a pathological process in infants manifested by poor weight gain, signs of esophagitis, persistent respiratory symptoms or complications, and changes in neurologic behavior. Gastroesophageal reflux generally resolves within the first year of life, as the lower esophageal sphincter mechanism matures. Traditionally, these infants have been managed conservatively with feeding schedule modifications, thickened feeds, changes in positions after feeding, and formula changes. Depending on the history and clinical presentation of an infant with GERD, more detailed evaluation and treatment may be necessary.

As per the North American Society for Pediatric Gastroenterology and Nutrition, if an upper gastrointestinal series has ruled out anatomic causes of gastroesophageal reflux, and nonpharmacologic interventions have failed, an acid suppressive agent is usually the first line of therapy. The lack of age-appropriate case definitions and randomized controlled trials, however, make it difficult for those practitioners who treat infants to have a evidence-based protocol for managing GERD.

EVIDENCE-BASED ANSWER

The literature on pediatric reflux can be divided into studies addressing clinically apparent reflux (vomiting or regurgitation) and reflux as measured by pH probe or other methods (TABLES 1 AND 2). Sodium alginate reduces vomiting and improves parents’ assessment of symptoms (strength of recommendation [SOR]: B, small randomized controlled trial [RCT]). Formula thickened with rice cereal decreases the number of postprandial emesis episodes in infants with gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD) (SOR: B, small RCT).

There are conflicting data on the effect of carob bean gum as a formula thickener and its effect on regurgitation frequency (SOR: B, small RCTs). Metoclopramide does not affect vomiting or regurgitation, but is associated with greater weight gain in infants over 3 months with reflux (SOR: B, low-quality RCTs).

Carob bean gum used as a formula thickener decreases reflux as measured by intraluminal impedance but not as measured by pH probe (SOR: B, RCT). Omeprazole and metoclopramide each improve the reflux index as measured by esophageal pH probe (SOR: B, RCT).

Evidence is conflicting for other commonly used conservative measures (such as positional changes) or other medications for symptomatic relief of infant GERD. There is very limited evidence or expert opinion regarding breastfed infants, particularly with regard to preservation of breastfeeding during therapy.

TABLE 1
Interventions that affect vomiting or regurgitation

INTERVENTIONTRIAL DESCRIPTIONEFFECT
Carob bean gum*Unblinded crossover RCT (n=14 infants w/regurgitation). Reflux episodes measured by intraluminal impedance and visual regurgitation score.5Improved.
0.4 g/100 ccCarob bean gum: 15 regurgitations/342 hrs.
Standard formula: 68
P<.0003
RCT, thickened vs. standard formula (n=20).No improvement.
Outcome: regurgitation score, parental diary.6Thickened formula: 2.2≠ 1.92 regurgitation score. Control formula: 3.3≠ 1.16.
P=.14
Crossover RCT (n=24). Formula thickened with carob bean gum vs rice cereal.Improved.
Outcomes: symptom scores and emesis episodes.7Both groups showed improved symptom scores and decreased emesis, but carob bean gum was superior to rice cereal-thickened formula.
Sodium alginateDouble-blind multicenter RCT of alginate vs placebo added to formula or breast milk (n=88). Intention-to-treat analysis.9Improved.
225 mg/115 ccFunded by manufacturer. 25% dropout rate. Breastfed infants included, but results not reported separately.Alginate: from 8.5 vomiting/regurgitation episodes to 3 per 24 h.
orPlacebo: from 7 episodes to 5 per 24 h.
450 mg/225 ccP=.009
Rice cerealRCT of thickened vs unthickened formula (n=20). Emesis episodes per 90-min postprandial period.4Improved.
(see also Carob emesis bean gum, above)Thickened formula: 1.2 +/- 0.7 episodes per 90 minutes postprandial
Placebo: 3.9 +/- 0.9 emesis episodes
P=0.015
MetoclopramideCrossover RCT (n=30). Metoclopramide vs placebo for 7 days. Mean daily symptom count (included vomiting and regurgitation).10No improvement.
0.1 mg/kg 4 times dailyPlacebo: Symptom count for
Placebo 6.5 1.3 per day
Metoclopramide 5.6 1.2
P=.19
Subgroup analysis infants >3 mo showed greater weight gain for treated infants.
*Used in the UK (Instant Carobel); not widely available in US
†Available in UK as Gaviscon Infant.

TABLE 2
Interventions that affect pH probe/measured reflux

INTERVENTIONDESCRIPTIONEFFECT
Carob bean gum*Unblinded crossover RCT (n=14 infants w/regurgitation). Reflux episodes measured by intraluminal impedance and visual regurgitation score. Limitations: unblinded; small sample size; no breastfed infants included.5Improved.
0.4 g/100 ccCarob bean gum: 536 episodes in 342 hours. Placebo: 647 episodes. P<.02
RCT, thickened vs standard formula.No improvement.
Reflux meas. by 24-h pH probe.6Reflux index for thickened formula, 11.1 ± 6.1. Standard formula, 13.2 ± 4.7. P=.41
Rice cerealRCT of thickened vs unthickened formulaNo improvement. Thickened formula group:
(n=20). Reflux measured by scintigraphy.426.8 ± 5.8 episodes per 90 min postprandial period. Unthickened formula group: 27.9 ± 4.0. P=NS.
Infant seat at 60°RCT, positioning in infant seat vs prone.Worsened. Infant seat: 16 ± 2.4 episodes
Episodes of reflux measured by pH probe.3in 2 h. Prone position: 10 ± 2.3 episodes.
P=.002
Head of bed at 30°Crossover RCT (n=90). Prone position vs prone/head of bed elevated to 30°. Number and length of reflux episodes, measured by pH probe.8No improvement. Head-elevated 6.2 ± 0.6 episodes per 2 h. Flat prone 7.8 ± 0.8 episodes per 2 h. P=NS.
Head-elevated 17.1 ± 2.4 minutes longest episode. Flat prone 17.9 ± 2.2 minutes. P=NS.
Pacifier useRCT (n=48). Seated vs prone position, with or without pacifier; reflux episodes meas. by pH probe.3Prone: Worsened from 7.2 ± 1.1 episodes in 2 h without pacifier to 12.8 ± 2.3 w/pacifier. P=.04.
OmeprazoleRCT (n=30 irritable infants with reflux or esophagitis). Reflux index (% of time pH <4) meas. by pH probe and “cry/fuss time.”11Irritability unchanged. Improved pH:
(Infants 5–10 kg: 10 mg/d; infants >10 kg: 10 mg bid)Omeprazole: Reflux index –8.9% ± 5.6.
Placebo: Reflux Index –1.9% ± 2. P<.001.
MetoclopramideCrossover RCT (n=30). Metoclopramide vs placebo for 7 days. Reflux index measured by pH probe. Wide confidence intervals.10Improved reflux index. Metoclopramide:
(0.1 mg/kg 4 times daily)10.3% (95% CI, 2.4–22.8). Placebo: 13.4% (95% CI, 2.8–30.5). P<.001

Evidence summary

Regurgitation (“spitting up”) and gastroesophageal reflux are common in infants. In a cross-sectional survey of 948 parents of healthy infants aged 0 to 13 months, regurgitation occurred daily in half of infants from birth to 3 months old, peaked to 67% at age 4 months, and was absent in 95% by age 12 months.1 Gastroesophageal disease (GERD) is characterized by refractory symptoms or complications (pain, irritability, vomiting, failure to thrive, dysphagia, respiratory symptoms, or esophagitis) and occurs in the minority of infants with reflux.2 This distinguishes the “happy spitter,” whose parents may simply require reassurance, from infants who require treatment.

 

 

 

Unfortunately, most of the available studies do not make this distinction in their subjects. Also, available data primarily regard formula-fed infants, and are insufficient to make recommendations for breastfed infants. Esophageal pH probe monitoring is the gold standard for measuring reflux in research; however, its correlation with symptoms is questionable and it is infrequently used in clinical practice.3 Therefore, recommendations are focused primarily on treating only clinically-evident reflux (emesis and regurgitation).

Five small RCTs studied the practice of using formula thickeners (TABLES 1 AND 2). In 1 study, formula thickened with rice cereal decreased emesis episodes.4 Two studies of carob bean gum–thickened formula vs plain formula yielded conflicting results.5,6 In the study showing improvement with carob bean gum, the parents were not blinded to the treatment, which may have led to bias favoring the treatment.5 An uncontrolled, comparative trial of carob bean gum vs rice cereal suggested superiority of carob bean gum as a thickener, although both treatments yielded improvement.7 Carob bean gum is available in the UK as a powder (Instant Carobel) but is not widely available in the US.

Three trials studied the effects of other conservative therapies such as positional changes and pacifiers on reflux measured by pH probe; unfortunately, none assessed clinical outcomes such as emesis or regurgitation.3 Reflux by pH probe was worsened in a trial studying the infant seat for positioning. In the trial studying elevating the head of the bed to 30° in the prone position, reflux measured by pH probe was also unchanged; prone positioning is no longer recommended due to the risk of Sudden Infant Death Syndrome (SIDS).8 The trial of pacifier use showed improvement of reflux by pH probe when used in the seated position, but worsening in the prone position. Since pH probe does not necessarily reflect clinical symptoms, the utility of the information from these studies is limited.

Only 1 trial of drugs used to treat infant reflux measured clinical symptoms. This large manufacturer-sponsored RCT found that sodium alginate9 significantly reduced emesis episodes in treated infants. Sodium alginate is marketed in the UK as Gaviscon Infant. While this trial included breastfed infants, it did not report the numbers of breastfed infants in the 2 treatment groups or present data separately for breastfed infants. Small RCTs of metoclopramide10 and omeprazole11 show significant improvement in reflux index measured by pH probe. However, metoclopramide yielded no improvement in symptom counts, and the omeprazole study resulted in no differences in “cry-fuss time” between treatment groups.

Recommendations from others

The North American Society for Pediatric Gastroenterology and Nutrition recommends thickening agents or a trial of hypoallergenic formula for vomiting infants.2 They caution against prone positioning and favor proton pump inhibitors over H2 blockers for symptomatic relief and healing of esophagitis. They found insufficient evidence to recommend surgery over medication.

Clinical Commentary

Lack of age-appropriate RCTs make evidence-based treatment difficult
Alfreda L. Bell, MD
Kelsey-Seybold Clinic, Houston, Tex

Gastroesophageal reflux, defined as the passage of gastric contents into the esophagus, is one of the most common gastroesophageal problems in infants. GERD is a pathological process in infants manifested by poor weight gain, signs of esophagitis, persistent respiratory symptoms or complications, and changes in neurologic behavior. Gastroesophageal reflux generally resolves within the first year of life, as the lower esophageal sphincter mechanism matures. Traditionally, these infants have been managed conservatively with feeding schedule modifications, thickened feeds, changes in positions after feeding, and formula changes. Depending on the history and clinical presentation of an infant with GERD, more detailed evaluation and treatment may be necessary.

As per the North American Society for Pediatric Gastroenterology and Nutrition, if an upper gastrointestinal series has ruled out anatomic causes of gastroesophageal reflux, and nonpharmacologic interventions have failed, an acid suppressive agent is usually the first line of therapy. The lack of age-appropriate case definitions and randomized controlled trials, however, make it difficult for those practitioners who treat infants to have a evidence-based protocol for managing GERD.

References

1. Nelson SP, Chen EH,, Syniar GM, Christoffel KK. Prevalence of symptoms of gastroesophageal reflux during infancy. A pediatric practice-based survey. Pediatric Practice Research Group. Arch Pediatr Adolesc Med 1997;151:569-572.

2. Rudolph CD, Mazur LJ, Liptak GS, et al. North American Society for Pediatric Gastroenterology and Nutrition. Guidelines for evaluation and treatment of gastroesophageal reflux in infants and children: Recommendations of the North American Society for Pediatric Gastroenterology and Nutrition. J Pediatr Gastroenterol Nutr 2001;32 Suppl 2:S1-S31.

3. Carroll AE, Garrison MM, Christakis DA. A systematic review of nonpharmacological and nonsurgical therapies for gastroesophageal reflux in infants. Arch Pediatr Adolesc Med 2002;156:109-113.

4. Orenstein SR, Magill HL, Brooks P. Thickening of infant feedings for therapy of gastroesophageal reflux. J Pediatr 1987;110:181-186.

5. Wenzl TG, Schneider S, Scheele F, Silny J, Heimann G, Skopnik H. Effects of thickened feeding on gastroesophageal reflux in infants: a placebo-controlled crossover study using intraluminal impedance. Pediatrics 2003;111(4 Pt 1):e355-359.

6. Vandemplas Y, Hachimi-Idrissi S, Casteels A, Mahler T, Loeb. A clinical trial with an “anti-regurgitation” formula. Eur J Pediatr 1994;153:419-423.

7. Borelli O, Salvia G, Campanozzi A. Use of a new thickened formula for treatment of symptomatic gastroesophageal reflux in infants. Ital J Gastroenterol Hepatol 1997;29:237-242.

8. Orenstein SR. Prone positioning in infant gastroesophageal reflux: Is elevation of the head worth the trouble? J Pediatr 1990;117:184-187.

9. Miller S. Comparison of the efficacy and safety of a new aluminum-free paediatric alginate preparation and placebo in infants with recurrent gastro-oesophageal reflux. Curr Med Res Opin 1999;15:160-168.

10. olia V, Calhoun J, Kuhns L, Kauffman RE. Randomized, prospective double-blind trial of metoclopramide and placebo for gastroesophageal reflux in infants. J Pediatr 1989;115:141-145.

11. Moore DJ, Tao BS, Lines DR, Hirte C, Heddle ML, Davidson GP. Double-blind placebo-controlled trial of omeprazole in irritable infants with gastroesophageal reflux. J Pediatr 2003;143:219-223.

References

1. Nelson SP, Chen EH,, Syniar GM, Christoffel KK. Prevalence of symptoms of gastroesophageal reflux during infancy. A pediatric practice-based survey. Pediatric Practice Research Group. Arch Pediatr Adolesc Med 1997;151:569-572.

2. Rudolph CD, Mazur LJ, Liptak GS, et al. North American Society for Pediatric Gastroenterology and Nutrition. Guidelines for evaluation and treatment of gastroesophageal reflux in infants and children: Recommendations of the North American Society for Pediatric Gastroenterology and Nutrition. J Pediatr Gastroenterol Nutr 2001;32 Suppl 2:S1-S31.

3. Carroll AE, Garrison MM, Christakis DA. A systematic review of nonpharmacological and nonsurgical therapies for gastroesophageal reflux in infants. Arch Pediatr Adolesc Med 2002;156:109-113.

4. Orenstein SR, Magill HL, Brooks P. Thickening of infant feedings for therapy of gastroesophageal reflux. J Pediatr 1987;110:181-186.

5. Wenzl TG, Schneider S, Scheele F, Silny J, Heimann G, Skopnik H. Effects of thickened feeding on gastroesophageal reflux in infants: a placebo-controlled crossover study using intraluminal impedance. Pediatrics 2003;111(4 Pt 1):e355-359.

6. Vandemplas Y, Hachimi-Idrissi S, Casteels A, Mahler T, Loeb. A clinical trial with an “anti-regurgitation” formula. Eur J Pediatr 1994;153:419-423.

7. Borelli O, Salvia G, Campanozzi A. Use of a new thickened formula for treatment of symptomatic gastroesophageal reflux in infants. Ital J Gastroenterol Hepatol 1997;29:237-242.

8. Orenstein SR. Prone positioning in infant gastroesophageal reflux: Is elevation of the head worth the trouble? J Pediatr 1990;117:184-187.

9. Miller S. Comparison of the efficacy and safety of a new aluminum-free paediatric alginate preparation and placebo in infants with recurrent gastro-oesophageal reflux. Curr Med Res Opin 1999;15:160-168.

10. olia V, Calhoun J, Kuhns L, Kauffman RE. Randomized, prospective double-blind trial of metoclopramide and placebo for gastroesophageal reflux in infants. J Pediatr 1989;115:141-145.

11. Moore DJ, Tao BS, Lines DR, Hirte C, Heddle ML, Davidson GP. Double-blind placebo-controlled trial of omeprazole in irritable infants with gastroesophageal reflux. J Pediatr 2003;143:219-223.

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What is the best treatment for analgesic rebound headaches?

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EVIDENCE-BASED ANSWER

Abrupt discontinuation of the offending analgesic(s), and treating rebound headaches with dihydroergotamine (DHE) as needed, results in significant improvement for most patients (strength of recommendation [SOR]: C; based on case series). Amitriptyline does not affect the frequency or severity of rebound headaches, but it may improve quality of life (SOR: B, low-powered randomized controlled trial). Prednisone or naratriptan (Amerge) lessen acute withdrawal symptoms from analgesics and reduce the need for rescue medications during the first 6 days of treatment; however, they do not affect headache frequency or severity (SOR: B, low-quality randomized controlled trial).

 

Evidence summary

Analgesic rebound headaches are seen in 1% of the population, mostly middle-aged women with underlying migraines.1,2 Also termed analgesic-overuse headaches, they are defined by the International Headache Society guidelines as headaches occurring more than 15 days per month, mild to moderate in intensity, developing or worsening with analgesic overuse, and resolving or reverting to the prior underlying headache pattern within 2 months of discontinuing the analgesic(s).3

A case series studied 50 patients with rebound headaches for 5 or more days a week at baseline.4 Patients were educated regarding analgesic overuse headaches, after which their analgesics were abruptly discontinued, and they were followed up to a year. Subcutaneous DHE was used as needed for symptomatic relief of excruciating headaches. At study completion, 78% of patients had adequately stopped analgesics. The goal of greater than 6 consecutive headache-free days was achieved in 74% patients in an average of 84 days.

A 9-week double-blind, placebo-controlled trial randomized 20 nondepressed patients with analgesic overuse headache to receive amitriptyline or active placebo (trihexyphenidyl).5 Patients were admitted to the hospital for 1 week and withdrawn from all analgesics. The 2 groups had similar baseline characteristics. During the hospitalization, the amitriptyline treatment group received intravenous amitriptyline escalating from 25 to 75 mg. During the following month, oral study medications were continued, and patients took low doses of aspirin or acetaminophen, as needed. There was no significant difference between the 2 groups with regard to analgesic use. At completion of this low-powered study, no difference was found between the 2 groups in headache frequency or analgesic use, although certain components of a quality-of-life scale were better in the amitriptyline group.

An open-label trial of patients with chronic migraine and analgesic overuse in a headache sub-specialty center abruptly withdrew 150 participants from analgesics and quasi-randomized them to 3 groups: prednisone (tapering from 60 to 20 mg over 6 days), naratriptan (Amerge) (2.5 mg twice daily for 6 days), or no prophylactic treatment.6 Patients given the active substances were told it would reduce withdrawal symptoms; patients given placebo were not given this advice. All patients received education about the pathophysiology of rebound headaches, kept a headache diary, and were phoned weekly to ensure compliance. In addition, they all received capsules containing gradually increasing doses of atenolol, nortriptyline, and flunarazine (a calcium channel blocker not FDA-approved.) Indo-methacin and chlorpromazine were used as needed. Results from the first 6 days showed no difference in headaches between the 3 groups; however, significantly more patients used chlorpromazine in the “no pharmacologic treatment” group

By the end of 5 weeks, headache frequency was significantly reduced in all groups from baseline; however, there were no differences between groups in headache frequency or intensity in this small study. Of note, there were statistically fewer withdrawal symptoms and less use of rescue medications among patients who received the initial prophylactic treatments. The indomethacin rescue use was 24%, 18%, and 14% of patients for the no prophylactic treatment, prednisone, and naratriptan groups respectively, while chlorpromazine rescue use was 14%, 0%, and 0%, respectively. The number of patients needed to treat to prevent any withdrawal symptoms (nausea, vomiting, nervousness, dizziness, etc.) was 1 for every 3.5 for naratriptan, and 6.4 for prednisone.

Recommendations from others

The American Council for Headache Education recommends discontinuing all analgesics.7 It notes some patients may need prophylactic medication (although no specific agent is recommended), and hospitalization may be indicated for withdrawal for patients who have abused narcotics. A headache textbook recommends 1 of 2 approaches for patients undergoing outpatient treatment: (1) gradual tapering of the offending medication with substitution of a long-acting nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug (NSAID) and initiation of preventive therapy, or (2) abrupt discontinuation of the offending medication and initiation followed by gradual tapering of a “transitional” medication such as NSAIDs, DHE, corticosteroids, or triptans. The authors recommend an intravenous DHE protocol for treatment failures and patients requiring inpatient treatment.8

Clinical commentary

Consider anxiety, depression, substance abuse, psychosocial stressors as triggers
Lisa Erlanger, MD
Swedish at Providence Family Medicine Residency, Seattle, Wash

Analgesic rebound headaches are clinically challenging. Patients are reluctant to believe that analgesic use is the cause, and good evidence for pharmacologic treatment of the problem is limited. Therefore, the family physician’s unique skills in patient-centered care are invaluable for helping patients comply with the only proven remedy: long-term analgesic abstinence. Even with intense education and support, abstinence rates are low and headache improvement for abstinent patients is relatively slow and not universal.

In discussing options for assisting with detoxification, we must be honest about the limits of our knowledge and clarify that improvement, rather than cure, is the goal. Identification and treatment of concurrent anxiety, depression and substance use is important, as well as identification of psychosocial stressors that may have triggered increased headache frequency. As even moderate amounts of regular analgesic use can cause this difficult to treat syndrome, preventive counseling with migraine patients, particularly those with increasing headache frequency, is essential.

References

1. Colas R, Munoz P, Temprano R, Gomez C, Pascual J. Chronic daily headache with analgesic overuse: epidemiology and impact on quality of life. Neurology 2004;62:1338-1342.

2. Toth C. Medications and substances as a cause of headache: a systematic review of the literature. Clin Neuropharmacol 2003;26:122-136.

3. Headache Classification Subcommittee of the International Headache Society. The international classification of headache disorders. 2nd ed. Cephalalgia 2004;24(1 Suppl):9-160.

4. Warner JS. The outcome of treating patients with suspected rebound headache. Headache 2001;41:684-692.

5. Descombes S, Brefel-Courbon C, Thalamas C, et al. Amitriptyline treatment in chronic drug-induced headache: a double-blind comparative pilot study. Headache 2001;41:178-182.

6. Krymchantowski AV, Moreira PF. Out-patient detoxification in chronic migraine: comparison of strategies. Cephalalgia 2003;23:982-993.

7. Purdy RA. I have a headache every single day—all about chronic daily headache. Headache (online) 1999. Available at: www.achenet.org/articles/purdy.php/. Accessed on February 7, 2004.

8. Siberstein SD, Lipton RB. Chronic daily headache, including transformed migraine, chronic tension-type headache, and medication overuse. In: Silberstein SD, Lipton RB, Delessio DJ, eds. Wolff’s Headache and Other Head Pain. Oxford: Oxford University Press 2001;247-282.

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Laura Leach, MLIS
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Department of Family Medicine, Carolinas HealthCare System, Charlotte, NC and University of North Carolina

Laura Leach, MLIS
Carolinas HealthCare System, Charlotte AHEC, Charlotte, NC

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Vanessa McPherson, MD
Department of Family Medicine, Carolinas HealthCare System, Charlotte, NC and University of North Carolina

Laura Leach, MLIS
Carolinas HealthCare System, Charlotte AHEC, Charlotte, NC

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EVIDENCE-BASED ANSWER

Abrupt discontinuation of the offending analgesic(s), and treating rebound headaches with dihydroergotamine (DHE) as needed, results in significant improvement for most patients (strength of recommendation [SOR]: C; based on case series). Amitriptyline does not affect the frequency or severity of rebound headaches, but it may improve quality of life (SOR: B, low-powered randomized controlled trial). Prednisone or naratriptan (Amerge) lessen acute withdrawal symptoms from analgesics and reduce the need for rescue medications during the first 6 days of treatment; however, they do not affect headache frequency or severity (SOR: B, low-quality randomized controlled trial).

 

Evidence summary

Analgesic rebound headaches are seen in 1% of the population, mostly middle-aged women with underlying migraines.1,2 Also termed analgesic-overuse headaches, they are defined by the International Headache Society guidelines as headaches occurring more than 15 days per month, mild to moderate in intensity, developing or worsening with analgesic overuse, and resolving or reverting to the prior underlying headache pattern within 2 months of discontinuing the analgesic(s).3

A case series studied 50 patients with rebound headaches for 5 or more days a week at baseline.4 Patients were educated regarding analgesic overuse headaches, after which their analgesics were abruptly discontinued, and they were followed up to a year. Subcutaneous DHE was used as needed for symptomatic relief of excruciating headaches. At study completion, 78% of patients had adequately stopped analgesics. The goal of greater than 6 consecutive headache-free days was achieved in 74% patients in an average of 84 days.

A 9-week double-blind, placebo-controlled trial randomized 20 nondepressed patients with analgesic overuse headache to receive amitriptyline or active placebo (trihexyphenidyl).5 Patients were admitted to the hospital for 1 week and withdrawn from all analgesics. The 2 groups had similar baseline characteristics. During the hospitalization, the amitriptyline treatment group received intravenous amitriptyline escalating from 25 to 75 mg. During the following month, oral study medications were continued, and patients took low doses of aspirin or acetaminophen, as needed. There was no significant difference between the 2 groups with regard to analgesic use. At completion of this low-powered study, no difference was found between the 2 groups in headache frequency or analgesic use, although certain components of a quality-of-life scale were better in the amitriptyline group.

An open-label trial of patients with chronic migraine and analgesic overuse in a headache sub-specialty center abruptly withdrew 150 participants from analgesics and quasi-randomized them to 3 groups: prednisone (tapering from 60 to 20 mg over 6 days), naratriptan (Amerge) (2.5 mg twice daily for 6 days), or no prophylactic treatment.6 Patients given the active substances were told it would reduce withdrawal symptoms; patients given placebo were not given this advice. All patients received education about the pathophysiology of rebound headaches, kept a headache diary, and were phoned weekly to ensure compliance. In addition, they all received capsules containing gradually increasing doses of atenolol, nortriptyline, and flunarazine (a calcium channel blocker not FDA-approved.) Indo-methacin and chlorpromazine were used as needed. Results from the first 6 days showed no difference in headaches between the 3 groups; however, significantly more patients used chlorpromazine in the “no pharmacologic treatment” group

By the end of 5 weeks, headache frequency was significantly reduced in all groups from baseline; however, there were no differences between groups in headache frequency or intensity in this small study. Of note, there were statistically fewer withdrawal symptoms and less use of rescue medications among patients who received the initial prophylactic treatments. The indomethacin rescue use was 24%, 18%, and 14% of patients for the no prophylactic treatment, prednisone, and naratriptan groups respectively, while chlorpromazine rescue use was 14%, 0%, and 0%, respectively. The number of patients needed to treat to prevent any withdrawal symptoms (nausea, vomiting, nervousness, dizziness, etc.) was 1 for every 3.5 for naratriptan, and 6.4 for prednisone.

Recommendations from others

The American Council for Headache Education recommends discontinuing all analgesics.7 It notes some patients may need prophylactic medication (although no specific agent is recommended), and hospitalization may be indicated for withdrawal for patients who have abused narcotics. A headache textbook recommends 1 of 2 approaches for patients undergoing outpatient treatment: (1) gradual tapering of the offending medication with substitution of a long-acting nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug (NSAID) and initiation of preventive therapy, or (2) abrupt discontinuation of the offending medication and initiation followed by gradual tapering of a “transitional” medication such as NSAIDs, DHE, corticosteroids, or triptans. The authors recommend an intravenous DHE protocol for treatment failures and patients requiring inpatient treatment.8

Clinical commentary

Consider anxiety, depression, substance abuse, psychosocial stressors as triggers
Lisa Erlanger, MD
Swedish at Providence Family Medicine Residency, Seattle, Wash

Analgesic rebound headaches are clinically challenging. Patients are reluctant to believe that analgesic use is the cause, and good evidence for pharmacologic treatment of the problem is limited. Therefore, the family physician’s unique skills in patient-centered care are invaluable for helping patients comply with the only proven remedy: long-term analgesic abstinence. Even with intense education and support, abstinence rates are low and headache improvement for abstinent patients is relatively slow and not universal.

In discussing options for assisting with detoxification, we must be honest about the limits of our knowledge and clarify that improvement, rather than cure, is the goal. Identification and treatment of concurrent anxiety, depression and substance use is important, as well as identification of psychosocial stressors that may have triggered increased headache frequency. As even moderate amounts of regular analgesic use can cause this difficult to treat syndrome, preventive counseling with migraine patients, particularly those with increasing headache frequency, is essential.

EVIDENCE-BASED ANSWER

Abrupt discontinuation of the offending analgesic(s), and treating rebound headaches with dihydroergotamine (DHE) as needed, results in significant improvement for most patients (strength of recommendation [SOR]: C; based on case series). Amitriptyline does not affect the frequency or severity of rebound headaches, but it may improve quality of life (SOR: B, low-powered randomized controlled trial). Prednisone or naratriptan (Amerge) lessen acute withdrawal symptoms from analgesics and reduce the need for rescue medications during the first 6 days of treatment; however, they do not affect headache frequency or severity (SOR: B, low-quality randomized controlled trial).

 

Evidence summary

Analgesic rebound headaches are seen in 1% of the population, mostly middle-aged women with underlying migraines.1,2 Also termed analgesic-overuse headaches, they are defined by the International Headache Society guidelines as headaches occurring more than 15 days per month, mild to moderate in intensity, developing or worsening with analgesic overuse, and resolving or reverting to the prior underlying headache pattern within 2 months of discontinuing the analgesic(s).3

A case series studied 50 patients with rebound headaches for 5 or more days a week at baseline.4 Patients were educated regarding analgesic overuse headaches, after which their analgesics were abruptly discontinued, and they were followed up to a year. Subcutaneous DHE was used as needed for symptomatic relief of excruciating headaches. At study completion, 78% of patients had adequately stopped analgesics. The goal of greater than 6 consecutive headache-free days was achieved in 74% patients in an average of 84 days.

A 9-week double-blind, placebo-controlled trial randomized 20 nondepressed patients with analgesic overuse headache to receive amitriptyline or active placebo (trihexyphenidyl).5 Patients were admitted to the hospital for 1 week and withdrawn from all analgesics. The 2 groups had similar baseline characteristics. During the hospitalization, the amitriptyline treatment group received intravenous amitriptyline escalating from 25 to 75 mg. During the following month, oral study medications were continued, and patients took low doses of aspirin or acetaminophen, as needed. There was no significant difference between the 2 groups with regard to analgesic use. At completion of this low-powered study, no difference was found between the 2 groups in headache frequency or analgesic use, although certain components of a quality-of-life scale were better in the amitriptyline group.

An open-label trial of patients with chronic migraine and analgesic overuse in a headache sub-specialty center abruptly withdrew 150 participants from analgesics and quasi-randomized them to 3 groups: prednisone (tapering from 60 to 20 mg over 6 days), naratriptan (Amerge) (2.5 mg twice daily for 6 days), or no prophylactic treatment.6 Patients given the active substances were told it would reduce withdrawal symptoms; patients given placebo were not given this advice. All patients received education about the pathophysiology of rebound headaches, kept a headache diary, and were phoned weekly to ensure compliance. In addition, they all received capsules containing gradually increasing doses of atenolol, nortriptyline, and flunarazine (a calcium channel blocker not FDA-approved.) Indo-methacin and chlorpromazine were used as needed. Results from the first 6 days showed no difference in headaches between the 3 groups; however, significantly more patients used chlorpromazine in the “no pharmacologic treatment” group

By the end of 5 weeks, headache frequency was significantly reduced in all groups from baseline; however, there were no differences between groups in headache frequency or intensity in this small study. Of note, there were statistically fewer withdrawal symptoms and less use of rescue medications among patients who received the initial prophylactic treatments. The indomethacin rescue use was 24%, 18%, and 14% of patients for the no prophylactic treatment, prednisone, and naratriptan groups respectively, while chlorpromazine rescue use was 14%, 0%, and 0%, respectively. The number of patients needed to treat to prevent any withdrawal symptoms (nausea, vomiting, nervousness, dizziness, etc.) was 1 for every 3.5 for naratriptan, and 6.4 for prednisone.

Recommendations from others

The American Council for Headache Education recommends discontinuing all analgesics.7 It notes some patients may need prophylactic medication (although no specific agent is recommended), and hospitalization may be indicated for withdrawal for patients who have abused narcotics. A headache textbook recommends 1 of 2 approaches for patients undergoing outpatient treatment: (1) gradual tapering of the offending medication with substitution of a long-acting nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug (NSAID) and initiation of preventive therapy, or (2) abrupt discontinuation of the offending medication and initiation followed by gradual tapering of a “transitional” medication such as NSAIDs, DHE, corticosteroids, or triptans. The authors recommend an intravenous DHE protocol for treatment failures and patients requiring inpatient treatment.8

Clinical commentary

Consider anxiety, depression, substance abuse, psychosocial stressors as triggers
Lisa Erlanger, MD
Swedish at Providence Family Medicine Residency, Seattle, Wash

Analgesic rebound headaches are clinically challenging. Patients are reluctant to believe that analgesic use is the cause, and good evidence for pharmacologic treatment of the problem is limited. Therefore, the family physician’s unique skills in patient-centered care are invaluable for helping patients comply with the only proven remedy: long-term analgesic abstinence. Even with intense education and support, abstinence rates are low and headache improvement for abstinent patients is relatively slow and not universal.

In discussing options for assisting with detoxification, we must be honest about the limits of our knowledge and clarify that improvement, rather than cure, is the goal. Identification and treatment of concurrent anxiety, depression and substance use is important, as well as identification of psychosocial stressors that may have triggered increased headache frequency. As even moderate amounts of regular analgesic use can cause this difficult to treat syndrome, preventive counseling with migraine patients, particularly those with increasing headache frequency, is essential.

References

1. Colas R, Munoz P, Temprano R, Gomez C, Pascual J. Chronic daily headache with analgesic overuse: epidemiology and impact on quality of life. Neurology 2004;62:1338-1342.

2. Toth C. Medications and substances as a cause of headache: a systematic review of the literature. Clin Neuropharmacol 2003;26:122-136.

3. Headache Classification Subcommittee of the International Headache Society. The international classification of headache disorders. 2nd ed. Cephalalgia 2004;24(1 Suppl):9-160.

4. Warner JS. The outcome of treating patients with suspected rebound headache. Headache 2001;41:684-692.

5. Descombes S, Brefel-Courbon C, Thalamas C, et al. Amitriptyline treatment in chronic drug-induced headache: a double-blind comparative pilot study. Headache 2001;41:178-182.

6. Krymchantowski AV, Moreira PF. Out-patient detoxification in chronic migraine: comparison of strategies. Cephalalgia 2003;23:982-993.

7. Purdy RA. I have a headache every single day—all about chronic daily headache. Headache (online) 1999. Available at: www.achenet.org/articles/purdy.php/. Accessed on February 7, 2004.

8. Siberstein SD, Lipton RB. Chronic daily headache, including transformed migraine, chronic tension-type headache, and medication overuse. In: Silberstein SD, Lipton RB, Delessio DJ, eds. Wolff’s Headache and Other Head Pain. Oxford: Oxford University Press 2001;247-282.

References

1. Colas R, Munoz P, Temprano R, Gomez C, Pascual J. Chronic daily headache with analgesic overuse: epidemiology and impact on quality of life. Neurology 2004;62:1338-1342.

2. Toth C. Medications and substances as a cause of headache: a systematic review of the literature. Clin Neuropharmacol 2003;26:122-136.

3. Headache Classification Subcommittee of the International Headache Society. The international classification of headache disorders. 2nd ed. Cephalalgia 2004;24(1 Suppl):9-160.

4. Warner JS. The outcome of treating patients with suspected rebound headache. Headache 2001;41:684-692.

5. Descombes S, Brefel-Courbon C, Thalamas C, et al. Amitriptyline treatment in chronic drug-induced headache: a double-blind comparative pilot study. Headache 2001;41:178-182.

6. Krymchantowski AV, Moreira PF. Out-patient detoxification in chronic migraine: comparison of strategies. Cephalalgia 2003;23:982-993.

7. Purdy RA. I have a headache every single day—all about chronic daily headache. Headache (online) 1999. Available at: www.achenet.org/articles/purdy.php/. Accessed on February 7, 2004.

8. Siberstein SD, Lipton RB. Chronic daily headache, including transformed migraine, chronic tension-type headache, and medication overuse. In: Silberstein SD, Lipton RB, Delessio DJ, eds. Wolff’s Headache and Other Head Pain. Oxford: Oxford University Press 2001;247-282.

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The Journal of Family Practice - 54(3)
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The Journal of Family Practice - 54(3)
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265-282
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