Hyponatremia Correction and Osmotic Demyelination Syndrome Risk: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis.
Osmotic demyelination syndrome (ODS) is a rare but severe condition often attributed to the rate of sodium collection. We evaluated the association between the overly rapid sodium correction in adult hospitalized patients with ODS. Systematic review and meta-analysis. Adults hospitalized hyponatremia patients. The studies comparing the incidence of ODS with and without rapid sodium correction inception to January 2024. Two reviewers independently extracted data and assessed the risk of bias and the certainty of evidence. The incidence of ODS following a rapid and nonrapid sodium correction was pooled using the random effects model. Subgroup and meta-regression analyses were performed for the robustness and the source of heterogeneity. Eleven cohort studies were included with 26,710 hospitalized hyponatremia patients. The definition of hyponatremia varied from <116 to <130 mmol/L, and overly rapid sodium correction was defined as >8 to 12 mmol/L within 24 hours. The overall incidence of ODS was 0.23%. The incidence of ODS in rapid and nonrapid sodium correction was 0.73% and 0.10%, respectively. Meta-analysis demonstrated that a rapid rate of sodium correction was associated with a higher incidence of ODS (odds ratio 3.16, 95% CI, 1.54-6.49, I2 = 27%), whereas some patients with hyponatremia developed ODS without rapid sodium level correction. The sensitivity analysis based on the quality of the studies was consistent with the main result. Various definition criteria for ODS diagnosis across studies, lack of potential electrolyte and treatment data that may affect the incidence of ODS. The rapid rate of sodium correction had a statistical correlation with a higher incidence of ODS. Among ODS without rapid correction, further studies are recommended to evaluate and comprehend the relationship for better and proper management of hospitalized patients with hyponatremia.