Critical Care Medicine: May 2016 -
Volume 44 - Issue 5 - p 992–999
Litton, E et al
Objective: A systematic review and
meta-analysis to assess the efficacy of earplugs as an ICU strategy for
reducing delirium. Data Sources: MEDLINE, EMBASE, and the Cochrane Central
Register of controlled trials were searched using the terms “intensive care,”
“critical care,” “earplugs,” “sleep,” “sleep disorders,” and “delirium.” Study
Selection: Intervention studies (randomized or nonrandomized) assessing the
efficacy of earplugs as a sleep hygiene strategy in patients admitted to a
critical care environment were included. Studies were excluded if they included
only healthy volunteers, did not report any outcomes of interest, did not
contain an intervention group of interest, were crossover studies, or were only
published in abstract form. Data Extraction: Nine studies published between
2009 and 2015, including 1,455 participants, fulfilled the eligibility criteria
and were included in the systematic review. Studies included earplugs as an
isolated intervention (n = 3), or as part of a bundle with eye shades (n = 2),
or earplugs, eye shades, and additional sleep noise abatement strategies (n =
4). The risk of bias was high for all studies. Data Synthesis: Five studies
comprising 832 participants reported incident delirium. Earplug placement was
associated with a relative risk of delirium of 0.59 (95% CI, 0.44–0.78) and no
significant heterogeneity between the studies (I2, 39%; p = 0.16). Hospital
mortality was reported in four studies (n = 481) and was associated with a
relative risk of 0.77 (95% CI, 0.54–1.11; I2, 0%; p < 0.001). Compliance
with the placement of earplugs was reported in six studies (n = 681). The mean
per-patient noncompliance was 13.1% (95% CI, 7.8–25.4) of those assigned to receive
earplugs. Conclusions: Placement of earplugs in patients admitted to the ICU,
either in isolation or as part of a bundle of sleep hygiene improvement, is
associated with a significant reduction in risk of delirium. The potential
effect of cointerventions and the optimal strategy for improving sleep hygiene
and associated effect on patient-centered outcomes remains uncertain.
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