Iyngkaran Pupalan, Toukhsati Samia R, Thomas Merlin C, Jelinek Michael V, Hare David L, Horowitz John D
Cardiologist and Senior Lecturer, Northern Territory School of Medicine, Flinders University, Bedford Park, South Australia.
Department of Cardiology, Austin Health, Heidelberg, Victoria, Australia.
Clin Med Insights Cardiol. 2016 Oct 12;10:163-171. doi: 10.4137/CMC.S38444. eCollection 2016.
Beta-blockers (BBs) are the mainstay prognostic medication for all stages of chronic heart failure (CHF). There are many classes of BBs, each of which has varying levels of evidence to support its efficacy in CHF. However, most CHF patients have one or more comorbid conditions such as diabetes, renal impairment, and/or atrial fibrillation. Patient enrollment to randomized controlled trials (RCTs) often excludes those with certain comorbidities, particularly if the symptoms are severe. Consequently, the extent to which evidence drawn from RCTs is generalizable to CHF patients has not been well described. Clinical guidelines also underrepresent this point by providing generic advice for all patients. The aim of this review is to examine the evidence to support the use of BBs in CHF patients with common comorbid conditions.
We searched MEDLINE, PubMed, and the reference lists of reviews for RCTs, post hoc analyses, systematic reviews, and meta-analyses that report on use of BBs in CHF along with patient demographics and comorbidities.
In total, 38 studies from 28 RCTs were identified, which provided data on six BBs against placebo or head to head with another BB agent in ischemic and nonischemic cardiomyopathies. Several studies explored BBs in older patients. Female patients and non-Caucasian race were underrepresented in trials. End points were cardiovascular hospitalization and mortality. Comorbid diabetes, renal impairment, or atrial fibrillation was detailed; however, no reference to disease spectrum or management goals as a focus could be seen in any of the studies. In this sense, enrollment may have limited more severe grades of these comorbidities.
RCTs provide authoritative information for a spectrum of CHF presentations that support guidelines. RCTs may provide inadequate information for more heterogeneous CHF patient cohorts. Greater Phase IV research may be needed to fill this gap and inform guidelines for a more global patient population.
β受体阻滞剂(BBs)是慢性心力衰竭(CHF)各阶段的主要预后用药。BBs有多种类型,每种类型在支持其对CHF疗效方面的证据水平各不相同。然而,大多数CHF患者有一项或多项合并症,如糖尿病、肾功能损害和/或心房颤动。随机对照试验(RCTs)的患者入组通常排除患有某些合并症的患者,尤其是症状严重的患者。因此,从RCTs得出的证据在多大程度上可推广到CHF患者尚未得到充分描述。临床指南也因对所有患者提供通用建议而未充分说明这一点。本综述的目的是研究支持在患有常见合并症的CHF患者中使用BBs的证据。
我们检索了MEDLINE、PubMed以及综述的参考文献列表,以查找报告CHF中BBs使用情况以及患者人口统计学和合并症的RCTs、事后分析、系统评价和荟萃分析。
总共确定了来自28项RCTs的38项研究,这些研究提供了关于六种BBs与安慰剂对比或在缺血性和非缺血性心肌病中与另一种BB药物进行头对头比较的数据。几项研究探讨了老年患者使用BBs的情况。试验中女性患者和非白种人代表性不足。终点是心血管住院和死亡率。详细说明了合并糖尿病、肾功能损害或心房颤动的情况;然而,在任何研究中都未提及以疾病谱或管理目标为重点。从这个意义上说,入组可能更多地限制了这些合并症的较严重等级。
RCTs为一系列支持指南的CHF表现提供了权威信息。对于更多样化的CHF患者队列,RCTs可能提供的信息不足。可能需要更多的IV期研究来填补这一空白,并为更广泛的患者群体提供指导方针。