%0 Journal Article
%T Carbocysteine as Adjuvant Therapy in Acute Respiratory Tract Infections in Patients without Underlying Chronic Conditions: Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis
%A Myriam Calle Rubio
%A Olga de la Serna Blazquez
%A Jos¨¦ Luis R. Martin
%A Manuel Ruiz Cuetos
%J Open Journal of Respiratory Diseases
%P 39-50
%@ 2163-9418
%D 2024
%I Scientific Research Publishing
%R 10.4236/ojrd.2024.142004
%X Objective: This study aims to systematically examine the existing evidence
regarding the clinical benefits of carbocysteine as an adjunctive treatment in
acute bronchopulmonary and otorhinological processes. Design: Systematic
review and meta-analysis. Data sources: An electronic search was
conducted across PubMed,
Cochrane Library, clinicaltrials.gov, and the European Clinical Trial Register,
with the search dated to May 2023. Bibliographic references from other
literature reviews and meta-analyses were also reviewed. The search was limited
to randomized clinical trials published in any language and year. It was
completed by cross-checking the references of the located articles. Methods:
Inclusion criteria covered studies assessing systemic or inhaled carbocysteine,
regardless of dosing regimen. Concomitant medication use was acceptable if
balanced between intervention and control groups. Authors independently
extracted data, resolving disagreements through consensus. Methodological
quality assessment relied on critical reading of each study. Dichotomous
variables were analyzed using odds ratio (OR), and a final effect size was
calculated. Statistical significance was established when confidence intervals
did not cross the neutral value. Heterogeneity was assessed via the X2 test and I2 index. Results: Out of 318 initially identified
studies, 4 met inclusion criteria. The meta-analysis for poor general condition
yielded an OR of 0.45 in favor of intervention, p = 0.013, with non-significant
heterogeneity. Cough events showed a percentage of 15.8% for carbocysteine vs.