Etiologies of Pediatric Cervical Lymphadenopathy: A Systematic Review of 2687 Subjects

Background . Cervical lymphadenopathy in children is common and its etiologies diverse. No systematic review of the differential diagnosis of pediatric cervical lymphadenopathy has been conducted. Objective . To determine the prevalence rate of specific etiologies of pediatric cervical lymphadenopat...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Ankita Deosthali MD, Katherine Donches MD, Michael DelVecchio MD, Stephen Aronoff MD
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2019-07-01
Series:Global Pediatric Health
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/2333794X19865440
id doaj-299bfb18aeac4a84b601c9f75e72ead8
record_format Article
spelling doaj-299bfb18aeac4a84b601c9f75e72ead82020-11-25T03:36:04ZengSAGE PublishingGlobal Pediatric Health2333-794X2019-07-01610.1177/2333794X19865440Etiologies of Pediatric Cervical Lymphadenopathy: A Systematic Review of 2687 SubjectsAnkita Deosthali MD0Katherine Donches MD1Michael DelVecchio MD2Stephen Aronoff MD3Temple University, Philadelphia, PA, USATemple University, Philadelphia, PA, USATemple University, Philadelphia, PA, USATemple University, Philadelphia, PA, USABackground . Cervical lymphadenopathy in children is common and its etiologies diverse. No systematic review of the differential diagnosis of pediatric cervical lymphadenopathy has been conducted. Objective . To determine the prevalence rate of specific etiologies of pediatric cervical lymphadenopathy. Data Sources . EMBASE, PubMed, and SCOPUS were searched electronically. Bibliographies of select studies were reviewed as well. Study Selection . (1) Any clinical trial, observational study, or cross-sectional case series with 10 or more subjects that included delineation of etiologies and/or associated conditions with lymphadenopathy; (2) subjects aged 0 to 21 years with enlarged lymphoid tissue on body; (3) lymphadenopathy was confirmed by clinical evaluation; and (4) no specific diagnoses were excluded. Data Extraction . Year and location of publication, definition of lymphadenopathy, percentage of lymphadenopathy that was cervical, total number of subjects, gender distribution of subjects, age range of patients, and specific etiologies. Results . Of the 1790 studies, 7 studies that were combined resulted in 2687 subjects that were selected. Nonspecific benign etiology was the most common diagnosis occurring at a rate of 67.8%. Epstein-Barr virus was the next most prevalent (8.86%), followed by malignancy (4.69%) and granulomatous disease (4.06%). The most common malignancy etiology was non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma (46.0%), and the most common granulomatous disease was tuberculosis (73.4%). Conclusions . This systematic review and meta-analysis provides a rate-based differential diagnosis of pediatric cervical lymphadenopathy. Although the most common causes of pediatric cervical lymphadenopathy are nonspecific, the etiologies are diverse. Rates and credible intervals are provided to enable a probability-based diagnostic approach to palpable cervical lymphadenopathy in this age group.https://doi.org/10.1177/2333794X19865440
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ankita Deosthali MD
Katherine Donches MD
Michael DelVecchio MD
Stephen Aronoff MD
spellingShingle Ankita Deosthali MD
Katherine Donches MD
Michael DelVecchio MD
Stephen Aronoff MD
Etiologies of Pediatric Cervical Lymphadenopathy: A Systematic Review of 2687 Subjects
Global Pediatric Health
author_facet Ankita Deosthali MD
Katherine Donches MD
Michael DelVecchio MD
Stephen Aronoff MD
author_sort Ankita Deosthali MD
title Etiologies of Pediatric Cervical Lymphadenopathy: A Systematic Review of 2687 Subjects
title_short Etiologies of Pediatric Cervical Lymphadenopathy: A Systematic Review of 2687 Subjects
title_full Etiologies of Pediatric Cervical Lymphadenopathy: A Systematic Review of 2687 Subjects
title_fullStr Etiologies of Pediatric Cervical Lymphadenopathy: A Systematic Review of 2687 Subjects
title_full_unstemmed Etiologies of Pediatric Cervical Lymphadenopathy: A Systematic Review of 2687 Subjects
title_sort etiologies of pediatric cervical lymphadenopathy: a systematic review of 2687 subjects
publisher SAGE Publishing
series Global Pediatric Health
issn 2333-794X
publishDate 2019-07-01
description Background . Cervical lymphadenopathy in children is common and its etiologies diverse. No systematic review of the differential diagnosis of pediatric cervical lymphadenopathy has been conducted. Objective . To determine the prevalence rate of specific etiologies of pediatric cervical lymphadenopathy. Data Sources . EMBASE, PubMed, and SCOPUS were searched electronically. Bibliographies of select studies were reviewed as well. Study Selection . (1) Any clinical trial, observational study, or cross-sectional case series with 10 or more subjects that included delineation of etiologies and/or associated conditions with lymphadenopathy; (2) subjects aged 0 to 21 years with enlarged lymphoid tissue on body; (3) lymphadenopathy was confirmed by clinical evaluation; and (4) no specific diagnoses were excluded. Data Extraction . Year and location of publication, definition of lymphadenopathy, percentage of lymphadenopathy that was cervical, total number of subjects, gender distribution of subjects, age range of patients, and specific etiologies. Results . Of the 1790 studies, 7 studies that were combined resulted in 2687 subjects that were selected. Nonspecific benign etiology was the most common diagnosis occurring at a rate of 67.8%. Epstein-Barr virus was the next most prevalent (8.86%), followed by malignancy (4.69%) and granulomatous disease (4.06%). The most common malignancy etiology was non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma (46.0%), and the most common granulomatous disease was tuberculosis (73.4%). Conclusions . This systematic review and meta-analysis provides a rate-based differential diagnosis of pediatric cervical lymphadenopathy. Although the most common causes of pediatric cervical lymphadenopathy are nonspecific, the etiologies are diverse. Rates and credible intervals are provided to enable a probability-based diagnostic approach to palpable cervical lymphadenopathy in this age group.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/2333794X19865440
work_keys_str_mv AT ankitadeosthalimd etiologiesofpediatriccervicallymphadenopathyasystematicreviewof2687subjects
AT katherinedonchesmd etiologiesofpediatriccervicallymphadenopathyasystematicreviewof2687subjects
AT michaeldelvecchiomd etiologiesofpediatriccervicallymphadenopathyasystematicreviewof2687subjects
AT stephenaronoffmd etiologiesofpediatriccervicallymphadenopathyasystematicreviewof2687subjects
_version_ 1724551481602867200