An apple juice a day?

Non-Clinical

Pippi, aged 3, has been a little bit unwell lately.  

Most of her family has had viral gastroenteritis, and she has now got it too.  

She’s been vomiting for the last 24 hours and is struggling to keep anything down.  Her parents are concerned that she is becoming dehydrated, so they bring her into the ED.  

She gets a sublingual ondansetron wafer and tries some oral rehydration solution.  “Yeuch!” she says as she spits it out, “That tastes disgusting.” You wonder if there is anything else you can try.

Today we are going to take a look at the following paper:-

What population did they look at?

Children aged 6 to 60 months who presented to the study a centre that met these inclusion criteria

The exclusion criteria essentially rule out children who have a number of pre-morbid conditions or who may have more serious underlying pathology.

What was the intervention they tried?

The intervention group had half-strength apple juice.

What did they compare this to?

This was compared to a standard apple-flavoured, sucralose-sweetened paediatric electrolyte solution.

What were their outcome measures?

The primary outcome was treatment failure. This was a composite measure defined as any of the following occurring in the 7 days following enrolment.

It’s easy to read the abstract of a trial and agree with the conclusion, but we should be more sceptical of what we read.  Using a validated tool, such as one from the Best Evidence in Emergency Medicine group, can help with critical appraisal.

Let’s go through the quality appraisal checklist for a randomised controlled trial.

Quality Appraisal Checklist

So we can see that the trial appears to hold up to scrutiny regarding its method and analysis.  What we really want to know is whether diluted apple juice is as good as the usual rehydration solution. The bottom line, according to the study authors, is this:-

Among children with mild gastroenteritis and minimal dehydration, initial oral hydration with dilute apple juice followed by their preferred fluids, compared with electrolyte maintenance solution, resulted in fewer treatment failures.

In order to reduce the need for intravenous rehydration, the team focused both on stopping the vomiting (with sublingual ondansetron) and replacing potential losses. 

Interestingly, 68% of the children in the study had no clinical evidence of dehydration (Clinical Dehydration Score of 0) but still received oral rehydration solution or diluted apple juice.  Here lies the catch in this study.  Many of the patients we see in Australian paediatric EDs are minimally or mildly dehydrated, and thus, the results of this study can probably be extrapolated to them.  

ORS was designed for children with Cholera who had significant dehydration, ongoing fluid loss, and pathology that affected their ability to absorb enteral fluid (remember those glucose-sodium co-transporters from med school?).  ORS is safe and effective across a wide range of dehydration, whereas this study demonstrates that diluted juice is beneficial only in the mildest cases.  So, by all means, start handing out dilute juice to many of the patients you see, but don’t chuck out the Gastrolyte just yet!

References

Freedman SB, Willan AR, Boutis K, Schuh S. Effect of Dilute Apple Juice and Preferred Fluids vs Electrolyte Maintenance Solution on Treatment Failure Among Children With Mild Gastroenteritis: A Randomized Clinical Trial. JAMA. Published online April 30, 2016. doi:10.1001/jama.2016.5352 Full text here

Jauregui J, Nelson D, Choo E, Stearns B, Levine AC, Liebmann O, et al. (2014) External Validation and Comparison of Three Pediatric Clinical Dehydration Scales. PLoS ONE 9(5): e95739. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0095739 Full text here