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UHL Clinical Librarian Service

Children's Health Evidence Update

10th April 2017

NICE  National Institute for Health and Care Excellence

Mitochondrial disorders in children: Co-enzyme Q10

Vaccine uptake in under 19s

Severe sialorrhoea (drooling) in children and young people with chronic neurological disorders: oral glycopyrronium bromide

Mollii suit for spasticity
New and Updated Cochrane Systematic Reviews

Once-daily versus multiple-daily dosing with intravenous aminoglycosides for cystic fibrosis
Authors' Conclusions: Once- and three-times daily aminoglycoside antibiotics appear to be equally effective in the treatment of pulmonary exacerbations of cystic fibrosis. There is evidence of less nephrotoxicity in children.

Dietary interventions for recurrent abdominal pain in childhood
Authors' conclusions: Overall, we found moderate- to low-quality evidence suggesting that probiotics may be effective in improving pain in children with RAP. Clinicians may therefore consider probiotic interventions as part of a holistic management strategy. However, further trials are needed to examine longer-term outcomes and to improve confidence in estimating the size of the effect, as well as to determine the optimal strain and dosage. Future research should also explore the effectiveness of probiotics in children with different symptom profiles, such as those with irritable bowel syndrome.

We found only a small number of trials of fibre-based interventions, with overall low-quality evidence for the outcomes. There was therefore no convincing evidence that fibre-based interventions improve pain in children with RAP. Further high-quality RCTs of fibre supplements involving larger numbers of participants are required. Future trials of low FODMAP diets and other dietary interventions are also required to facilitate evidence-based recommendations.

Pharmacological interventions for recurrent abdominal pain in childhood
Authors' conclusions: There is currently no convincing evidence to support the use of drugs to treat RAP in children. Well-conducted clinical trials are needed to evaluate any possible benefits and risks of pharmacological interventions. In practice, if a clinician chooses to use a drug as a 'therapeutic trial', they and the patient need to be aware that RAP is a fluctuating condition and any 'response' may reflect the natural history of the condition or a placebo effect, rather than drug efficacy.

Urate oxidase for the prevention and treatment of tumour lysis syndrome in children with cancer
Authors' conclusions: Although urate oxidase might be effective in reducing serum uric acid, it is unclear whether it reduces clinical TLS, renal failure, or mortality. Adverse effects might be more common for urate oxidase compared with allopurinol. Clinicians should weigh the potential benefits of reducing uric acid and uncertain benefits of preventing mortality or renal failure from TLS against the potential risk of adverse effects.

Prophylactic levosimendan for the prevention of low cardiac output syndrome and mortality in paediatric patients undergoing surgery for congenital heart disease

Authors Conclusions: The current level of evidence is insufficient to judge whether prophylactic levosimendan prevents low cardiac output syndrome and mortality in paediatric patients undergoing surgery for congenital heart disease. So far, no significant differences have been detected between levosimendan and standard inotrope treatments in this setting.

The authors evaluated the quality of evidence as low, using the GRADE approach. Reasons for downgrading were serious risk of bias (performance and detection bias due to unblinded setting of two RCTs), serious risk of inconsistency, and serious to very serious risk of imprecision (small number of included patients, low event rates).

Prophylactic drug management for febrile seizures in children
Authors' conclusions: We found reduced recurrence rates for children with febrile seizures for intermittent diazepam and continuous phenobarbitone, with adverse effects in up to 30%. Apparent benefit for clobazam treatment in one trial needs to be replicated to be judged reliable. Given the benign nature of recurrent febrile seizures, and the high prevalence of adverse effects of these drugs, parents and families should be supported with adequate contact details of medical services and information on recurrence, first aid management and, most importantly, the benign nature of the phenomenon.

Ethosuximide, sodium valproate or lamotrigine for absence seizures in children and adolescents
Authors' conclusions: With regards to both efficacy and tolerability, ethosuximide represents the optimal initial empirical monotherapy for children and adolescents with absence seizures. However, if absence and generalised tonic-clonic seizures coexist, valproate should be preferred, as ethosuximide is probably inefficacious on tonic-clonic seizures.

Emollients and moisturisers for eczema
Authors' conclusions: Most moisturisers showed some beneficial effects, producing better results when used with active treatment, prolonging time to flare, and reducing the number of flares and amount of topical corticosteroids needed to achieve similar reductions in eczema severity. We did not find reliable evidence that one moisturiser is better than another.

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If full text is not available, please email us.  
UpToDate - What's new in Pediatrics

This topic last updated: 4th Apr 2017, including:
  • Maternal obesity and risk of cerebral palsy (March 2017)
  • Smartphone-integrated infant physiologic monitors not beneficial (March 2017)
  • Tonsillectomy or watchful waiting for children with recurrent throat infections (February 2017)
DynaMed Plus

Topic: Lead poisoning in children
Review of childhood blood lead levels, cognitive function, and socioeconomic status in adulthood (JAMA 2017 Mar 28)

Topic: Acquired hypothyroidism in children
American Diabetes Association (ADA) recommendations for screening for hypothyroidism in children with type 1 diabetes (Diabetes Care 2017 Jan)

Topic: Prader-Willi syndrome

  • Intranasal oxytocin reported to improve feeding and social skills in infants with Prader-Willi syndrome (Pediatrics 2017 Feb)
  • Growth hormone may be associated with improved cognitive and adaptive behavior in children with Prader-Willi syndrome (J Child Psychol Psychiatry 2017 Jan)

Topic: Migraine in children and adolescents
Green A, et al. Managing Migraine Headaches in Children and Adolescents. (Expert Rev Clin Pharmacol 2016)

Topic: Moderate to severe traumatic brain injury
Therapeutic hypothermia for traumatic brain injury may reduce mortality and improve neurologic outcomes in adults but may increase mortality in children (Crit Care Med 2017 Apr)

Topic: Urinary tract infection (UTI) in children
ACR Appropriateness Criteria for urinary tract infection in children (National Guideline Clearinghouse 2017 Mar 20)

Topic: Crohn disease in children
mesalazine may not reduce risk of relapse in children and adolescents with Crohn disease in remission (Cochrane Database Syst Rev 2016 Sep 28)

 

Review of bleeding disorders in congenital syndromes (Pediatrics 2017 Feb) view update
Other reports, statistics and guidance

Obesity and the food environment
Public Health England has published Health Matters: Obesity and the food environment. This resource explores how the food environment can be fundamentally changed so that healthier choice becomes the default thereby supporting children and their families to improve their diets. It includes links to information and resources intended to encourage healthier food choices to enable people to live healthier lives.
Autism services for children and young people
 
Healthwatch has published Autism services for children and young people: findings from the Healthwatch network.  The briefing examines the four most common issues which families using autism services would like to see improved.  These are: understanding and knowledge; waiting times; support for parent carers; and communication and co-ordination.

The Department of Health, Public Health England and NHS England have published National flu immunisation programme plan for 2017 to 2018.  The flu plan sets out a coordinated and evidence-based approach to planning for, and responding to, the demands of influenza across England.  It provides an overview of the co-ordination and the preparation for the flu season and signposting to further guidance and information.  It is supported by the annual flu letter and includes details about the extension of the flu vaccination programme to children. 


Sugar reduction guidance
Public Health England (PHE) has published Sugar Reduction: Achieving the 20% a technical report outlining progress to date, guidelines for industry, 2015 baseline levels in key foods and next steps. It sets out guidelines for all sectors of the food industry on how to achieve a 20% sugar reduction across the top nine categories of food that contribute most to intakes of children up to the age of 18 years.




Statistics

2017 Child Health Profiles
 
Information sourced with thanks to HEES Daily Health Bulletin 
100,000 Genomes Project

UHL is part of the East of England GMC taking part in the 100,000 Genomics England project.

This is an excellent opportunity for patients with rare conditions and certain cancers, and their families, to obtain a genetic diagnosis by genomic sequencing.  The aim is to improve and personalise patient treatment and care, develop a genomic medicine service for the NHS and find new scientific discoveries and medical insights.

UHL colleagues including Professor Julian Barwell, Dr Corrina Powell and Helen Harrison have produced “Eligibility Wheels” as a simple guide to help clinicians identify potential participants to join the 100,000 Genomes Project, you can view and download the Eligibility Wheels

Please share this information with other colleagues that see patients who may be eligible to participate in this project 

Contact the Leicester recruitment team via email or 0116 258 6968.
NHS Behind the Headlines - Media stories explained

Breastfeeding 'doesn't boost children's intelligence'

Children's screen time linked to diabetes risk factors

Parents told to use pram covers to protect babies from air pollution

Could brain scans be used to screen for autism?






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