Victoria Fellowship (Government of Victoria, Australia); CRB Blackburn Scholarship (Royal Australasian College of Physicans); Overseas Research Experience Scholarship, University of Melbourne.
Immune thrombocytopenic purpura (ITP) that is unresponsive to conventional treatment is uncommon. In this situation, additional therapeutic options are limited and management is challenging. We describe the case of a 10-week-old infant that developed life-threatening ITP that was unresponsive to immunoglobulin and corticosteroids that was successfully managed with the monoclonal antibody rituximab. The literature on the use of rituximab in nonresponsive ITP is reviewed.
Objectives: 47% of pre-school children and 25% of school-aged children are anaemic. Daily iron supplementation remains a key anaemia control intervention, but benefits and safety in children are debated. We systematically reviewed evidence for daily iron supplementation in 4-23m, 2-5y and 5-12y children. Methods: Separate searches and systematic-reviews/meta-analyses were performed for each age-group. Electronic databases and other sources were searched for randomized controlled trials comparing daily iron supplementation with control. Random-effects meta-analysis was used. Riskof-bias was estimated using the Cochrane tool. Results: For children 4-23m, 2-5y and 5-12y respectively we identified 9533, 9169 and 16501 citations, from which 35, 15 and 32 eligible studies were identified, of which 9, 0 and 4 were at low overall risk-of-bias. Iron improved haemoglobin and ferritin and, in 4-23 m and 5-12y, reduced anaemia and iron deficiency. In 5-12y, iron improved global cognitive scores (SMD 0.50 [0.11, 0.90], p = 0.01) and in anaemic children, IQ (MD 4.55 [0.16, 8.94], p = 0.04). In 2-5y, limited data
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.