NSAID Use and Effects on Pediatric Bone Healing: A Review of Current Literature
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
3. Results
3.1. Retrospective Cohort Studies
3.2. Prospective Randomized Studies
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Study Year | Author | Number of Patients | Male/Female | Mean Age (Not Exposed/Exposed) | Mean Follow Up (Not Exposed/Exposed) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2018 | Zura et al. [8] | 237,033 fractures | 146,234 fractures/90,790 fractures | 0–18 years | 12 months |
2008 | Sucato et al. [13] | 319 total (158 exposed) | 50/269 | 14.2 years | 39 months |
2003 | Vitale et al. [15] | 208 total (60 exposed) | 59/149 | 13.4 years | 67 months |
2010 | Kay et al. [16] | 221 total (169 exposed) | 142/79 | 6.7 years (5.5 years/7.1 years) | 6.2 months (6.7 months/6.9 months) |
2011 | Kay et al. [17] | 327 total (299 exposed) | 181/136 | (8.4 years/9.2 years) | (38 months/44 months) |
2016 | DePeter et al. [18] | 808 total (338 exposed) | 508/300 | 7 years (7 years/7 years) | -- |
2009 | Drendel et al. [19] | 336 total (169 exposed) | 126/210 | (8.2 years/7.4 years) | 4 years |
2020 | Nuelle et al. [20] | 95 total (49 exposed) | 58/37 | 7.6 years | 6 months |
Study | Fracture Locations | NSAID Used | Clinical Relevance/Findings | LOE/Study Type | Risk for Bias |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Drendel et al. [19] | Upper extremity fractures | Ibuprofen | Primary outcome: Ibuprofen was at least as effective as acetaminophen with codeine as outpatient analgesia for children with arm fractures Secondary outcome: No nonunions reported with use of ibuprofen or acetaminophen with codeine | I—RCT | Low risk |
Nuelle et al. [20] | Long bone fractures | Ibuprofen and Ketorolac | Ibuprofen does not impair clinical or radiographic long bone fracture healing in skeletally immature patients | I—RCT | Low risk |
Zura et al. [8] | Metacarpal, radius, ankle, patella, radius and ulna, fibula, pelvis, clavicle, humerus, femur, tibia, ulna, metatarsal, tarsal, tibia and fibula, scaphoid | Did not specify | NSAIDs alone did not increase risk of pediatric nonunion Risk factors for pediatric nonunion are similar to adult nonunion risk factors [increasing age, male gender, high body-mass index, severe fracture (e.g., open fracture, multiple fractures), and tobacco smoking] Opioids should be used cautiously in pediatric patients, as they are associated with a significant and substantial elevation of nonunion risk | II—Prognostic Retrospective Study | Moderate risk |
DePeter et al. [18] | Tibia, femur, humerus, scaphoid, or fifth metatarsus | Ibuprofen | There was no statistically significant association between ibuprofen exposure and the development of a bone healing complications in the tibia, femur, humerus, scaphoid, or fifth metatarsal | III—Retrospective Comparative Study | Moderate risk |
Sucato et al. [13] | Vertebrae | Ketorolac | Ketorolac does not increase the incidence of developing a pseudoarthrosis when used as an adjunct for postoperative analgesia following a PSFI for AIS using segmental spinal instrumentation and iliac crest bone graft. | III—Retrospective Comparative Study | Moderate risk |
Kay et al. [16] | Supracondylar, forearm, lateral condyle, femur, tibia, or ankle fractures | Ketorolac and ibuprofen | Perioperative ketorolac use does not increase the risk of complications after operative fracture care of supracondylar, forearm, lateral condyle, femur, tibia, or ankle fractures in children | III—Retrospective Comparative Study | Moderate risk |
Kay et al. [17] | Lower extremity osteotomies | Ketorolac | Perioperative ketorolac is safe for children having lower extremity osteotomies as there is no significant difference in the rate of either osseous or soft tissue complications between ketorolac provided and no ketorolac patients | III—Retrospective Comparative Study | Moderate risk |
Vitale et al. [15] | Vertebrae | Ketorolac | Degree of spine curvature is significant in predicting reoperation; treatment with ketorolac is not a significant independent predictor for nonunion/reoperation | III—Retrospective Comparative Study | Moderate risk |
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Choo, S.; Nuelle, J.A.V. NSAID Use and Effects on Pediatric Bone Healing: A Review of Current Literature. Children 2021, 8, 821. https://doi.org/10.3390/children8090821
Choo S, Nuelle JAV. NSAID Use and Effects on Pediatric Bone Healing: A Review of Current Literature. Children. 2021; 8(9):821. https://doi.org/10.3390/children8090821
Chicago/Turabian StyleChoo, Stephanie, and Julia A. V. Nuelle. 2021. "NSAID Use and Effects on Pediatric Bone Healing: A Review of Current Literature" Children 8, no. 9: 821. https://doi.org/10.3390/children8090821
APA StyleChoo, S., & Nuelle, J. A. V. (2021). NSAID Use and Effects on Pediatric Bone Healing: A Review of Current Literature. Children, 8(9), 821. https://doi.org/10.3390/children8090821