AI Article Synopsis

  • Current therapies for pediatric Inflammatory Bowel Diseases (IBD) often fail to maintain long-term remission, highlighting a need for alternative treatments like antibiotics.
  • A systematic study reviewed randomized controlled trials assessing the safety and efficacy of antibiotics in pediatric IBD, including two studies with a total of 101 participants showing low risk of bias.
  • Results indicated that while certain antibiotic combinations showed potential benefits, especially in inducing remission, overall evidence is still insufficient to recommend widespread use in clinical practice.

Article Abstract

Current therapies in pediatric Inflammatory Bowel Diseases (IBD) target the immune system and often fail to sustain long-term remission. There is a high need for development of alternative treatment strategies such as antibiotics in pediatric IBD. This study systematically assessed efficacy and safety of antibiotics in pediatric IBD. CENTRAL, EMBASE, and Medline were searched for Randomized Controlled Trials (RCTs). Quality assessment was conducted with the Cochrane risk-of-bias tool.: Two RCTs (n = 101, 4.4-18 years, 43% male) were included. Both studies had overall low risk of bias. In mild-to-moderate Crohn's disease, azithromycin+metronidazole (AZ+MET) (n = 35) compared to metronidazole (MET) alone (n = 38) did not induce a significantly different response (PCDAI drop ≥12.5 or remission) (p = 0.07). For induction of remission (PCDAI≤10), AZ+MET was more effective than MET (p = 0.025). In Acute Severe Colitis, mean 5-day-PUCAI was significantly lower in the antibiotic (vancomycin, amoxicillin, metronidazole, doxycycline)+intravenous-corticosteroids group (AB+IVCS) (n = 16) compared to IVCS alone (n=12) (p = 0.037), whereas remission (PUCAI<10) did not differ (p = 0.61). No significant drug-related adverse events were reported. Results of this systematic review of antibiotic use highlight the lack of evidence in pediatric IBD. More evidence is needed before widespread implementation in daily practice.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/17474124.2021.1940956DOI Listing

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