Sanders Robert D, Nicholson Amanda, Lewis Sharon R, Smith Andrew F, Alderson Phil
Surgical Outcomes Research Centre & Department of Anaesthesia, University College London Hospital & Wellcome Departmentof Imaging Neuroscience, University College London, London, UK.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2013 Jul 3;2013(7):CD009971. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD009971.pub2.
Patients undergoing vascular surgery are a high-risk population with widespread atherosclerosis, an adverse cardiovascular risk profile and often multiple co-morbidities. Postoperative cardiovascular complications, including myocardial infarct (MI), are common. Statins are the medical treatment of choice to reduce high cholesterol levels. Evidence is accumulating that patients taking statins at the time of surgery are protected against a range of perioperative complications, but the specific benefits for patients undergoing noncardiac vascular surgery are not clear.
We examined whether short-term statin therapy, commenced before or on the day of noncardiac vascular surgery and continuing for at least 48 hours afterwards, improves patient outcomes including the risk of complications, pain, quality of life and length of hospital stay. We also examined whether the effect of statin therapy on these outcomes changes depending on the dose of statin received.
We searched the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (CENTRAL) (The Cochrane Library 2012, Issue 7), MEDLINE via Ovid SP (1966 to August 2012), EMBASE via Ovid SP (1966 to August 2012), CINAHL via EBSCO host (1966 to August 2012) and ISI Web of Science (1946 to July 2012) without any language restriction. We used a combination of free text search and controlled vocabulary search. The results were limited to randomized controlled clinical trials (RCTs). We conducted forwards and backwards citation of key articles and searched two clinical trial Websites for ongoing trials (www.clinicaltrials.gov and http://www.controlled-trials.com).
We included RCTs that had compared short-term statin therapy, either commenced de novo or with existing users randomly assigned to different dosages, in adult participants undergoing elective and emergency noncardiac arterial surgery, including both open and endovascular procedures. We defined short-term as commencing before or on the day of surgery and continuing for at least 48 hours afterwards.
Two authors independently assessed trial quality and extracted data, including information on adverse events. We contacted study authors for additional information. We performed separate analyses for the comparisons of statin with placebo/no treatment and between different doses of statin. We presented results as pooled risk ratios (RRs) with 95% confidence intervals (CIs) based on random-effects models (inverse variance method). We employed the Chi(2) test and calculated the I(2) statistic to investigate study heterogeneity.
We identified six eligible studies in total. The six Included studies were generally of high quality, but the largest eligible study was excluded because of concerns about its validity. Study populations were statin naive, which led to a considerable loss of eligible participants.Five RCTs compared statin use with placebo or standard care. We pooled results from three studies, with a total of 178 participants, for mortality and non-fatal event outcomes. In the statin group, 7/105 (6.7%) participants died within 30 days of surgery, as did 10/73 (13.7%) participants in the control group. Only one death in each group was from cardiovascular causes, with an incidence of 0.95% in statin participants and 1.4% in control participants, respectively. All deaths occurred in a single study population, and so effect estimates were derived from one study only. The risk ratio (RR) of all-cause mortality in statin users showed a non-significant decrease in risk (RR 0.73, 95% CI 0.31 to 1.75). For cardiovascular death, the risk ratio was 1.05 (95% CI 0.07 to 16.20). Non-fatal MI within 30 days of surgery was reported in three studies and occurred in 4/105 (3.8%) participants in the statin group and 8/73 (11.0%) participants receiving placebo, for a non-significant decrease in risk (RR 0.47, 95% CI 0.15 to 1.52). Several studies reported muscle enzyme levels as safety measures, but only three (with a total of 188 participants) reported explicitly on clinical muscle syndromes, with seven events reported and no significant difference found between statin users and controls (RR 0.94, 95% CI 0.24 to 3.63). The only participant-reported outcome was nausea in one small study,with no significant difference in risk between groups.Two studies compared different doses of atorvastatin, with a total of 145 participants, but reported data were not sufficient to allow us to determine the effect of higher doses on any outcome.
AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: Evidence was insufficient to allow review authors to conclude that statin use resulted in either a reduction or an increase in any of the outcomes examined. The existing body of evidence leaves questions about the benefits of perioperative use of statins for vascular surgery unanswered. Widespread use of statins in the target population means that it may now be difficult for researchers to undertake the large RCTs needed to demonstrate any effect on the incidence of postoperative cardiovascular events. However, participant-reported outcomes have been neglected and warrant further study.
接受血管手术的患者是高危人群,普遍存在动脉粥样硬化,心血管风险状况不良,且常伴有多种合并症。术后心血管并发症,包括心肌梗死(MI)很常见。他汀类药物是降低高胆固醇水平的首选药物治疗。越来越多的证据表明,手术时服用他汀类药物的患者可预防一系列围手术期并发症,但对于接受非心脏血管手术的患者的具体益处尚不清楚。
我们研究了在非心脏血管手术前或手术当天开始并持续至少48小时的短期他汀类药物治疗是否能改善患者预后,包括并发症风险、疼痛、生活质量和住院时间。我们还研究了他汀类药物治疗对这些预后的影响是否因所接受的他汀类药物剂量而异。
我们检索了Cochrane对照试验中心注册库(CENTRAL)(Cochrane图书馆2012年第7期)、通过Ovid SP检索的MEDLINE(1966年至2012年8月)、通过Ovid SP检索的EMBASE(1966年至2012年8月)、通过EBSCO主机检索的CINAHL(1966年至2012年8月)以及ISI科学网(1946年至2012年7月),无任何语言限制。我们使用了自由文本搜索和控制词汇搜索相结合的方法。结果仅限于随机对照临床试验(RCT)。我们对关键文章进行了向前和向后引用,并在两个临床试验网站上搜索了正在进行的试验(www.clinicaltrials.gov和http://www.controlled-trials.com)。
我们纳入了将短期他汀类药物治疗(无论是从头开始还是将现有使用者随机分配到不同剂量)与接受择期和急诊非心脏动脉手术(包括开放手术和血管内手术)的成年参与者进行比较的RCT。我们将短期定义为在手术前或手术当天开始并持续至少48小时。
两位作者独立评估试验质量并提取数据,包括不良事件信息。我们联系研究作者获取更多信息。我们分别对他汀类药物与安慰剂/未治疗以及不同剂量他汀类药物之间的比较进行了分析。我们基于随机效应模型(逆方差法)将结果表示为合并风险比(RRs)及95%置信区间(CIs)。我们采用卡方检验并计算I²统计量以研究研究异质性。
我们总共确定了六项符合条件的研究。这六项纳入研究总体质量较高,但由于对其有效性的担忧,最大的符合条件的研究被排除。研究人群为未使用过他汀类药物的患者,这导致大量符合条件的参与者流失。五项RCT将他汀类药物的使用与安慰剂或标准治疗进行了比较。我们汇总了三项研究(共178名参与者)关于死亡率和非致命事件结局的结果。在他汀类药物组中,7/105(6.7%)的参与者在手术后30天内死亡,对照组中有10/73(13.7%)的参与者死亡。每组中仅有一例死亡是由心血管原因导致的,他汀类药物组参与者的发生率为0.95%,对照组为1.4%。所有死亡均发生在单一研究人群中,因此效应估计仅来自一项研究。他汀类药物使用者全因死亡率的风险比(RR)显示风险有非显著降低(RR 0.73,95% CI 0.31至1.75)。对于心血管死亡,风险比为1.05(95% CI 0.07至16.20)。三项研究报告了手术后30天内的非致命性心肌梗死,他汀类药物组中有4/105(3.8%)的参与者发生,接受安慰剂的参与者中有8/73(11.0%)发生,风险有非显著降低(RR 0.47,95% CI 0.15至1.52)。几项研究将肌肉酶水平作为安全指标进行了报告,但只有三项研究(共188名参与者)明确报告了临床肌肉综合征,报告了七例事件,他汀类药物使用者与对照组之间未发现显著差异(RR 0.94,95% CI 0.24至3.63)。唯一一项由参与者报告的结局是一项小型研究中的恶心,两组之间风险无显著差异。两项研究比较了不同剂量的阿托伐他汀,共145名参与者,但报告的数据不足以让我们确定更高剂量对任何结局的影响。
证据不足,无法让综述作者得出他汀类药物的使用会导致所研究的任何结局降低或增加的结论。现有的证据未能解答围手术期使用他汀类药物对血管手术益处的疑问。在目标人群中广泛使用他汀类药物意味着研究人员现在可能难以开展大型RCT来证明对术后心血管事件发生率有任何影响。然而,参与者报告的结局被忽视了,值得进一步研究。