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...
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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 |
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