Zacharias Antony P, Jeyaraj Rebecca, Hobolth Lise, Bendtsen Flemming, Gluud Lise Lotte, Morgan Marsha Y
UCL Institute for Liver & Digestive Health, Division of Medicine, Royal Free Campus, University College London, London, UK, NW3 2PF.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2018 Oct 29;10(10):CD011510. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD011510.pub2.
Non-selective beta-blockers are recommended for the prevention of bleeding in people with cirrhosis, portal hypertension and gastroesophageal varices. Carvedilol is a non-selective beta-blocker with additional intrinsic alpha-blocking effects, which may be superior to traditional, non-selective beta-blockers in reducing portal pressure and, therefore, in reducing the risk of upper gastrointestinal bleeding.
To assess the beneficial and harmful effects of carvedilol compared with traditional, non-selective beta-blockers for adults with cirrhosis and gastroesophageal varices.
We combined searches in the Cochrane Hepato-Biliary's Controlled Trials Register, the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (CENTRAL), MEDLINE, Embase, LILACS, and Science Citation Index with manual searches. The last search update was 08 May 2018.
We included randomised clinical trials comparing carvedilol versus traditional, non-selective beta-blockers, irrespective of publication status, blinding, or language. We included trials evaluating both primary and secondary prevention of upper gastrointestinal bleeding in adults with cirrhosis and verified gastroesophageal varices.
Three review authors (AZ, RJ and LH), independently extracted data. The primary outcome measures were mortality, upper gastrointestinal bleeding and serious adverse events. We undertook meta-analyses and presented results using risk ratios (RR) or mean differences (MD), both with 95% confidence intervals (CIs), and I values as a marker of heterogeneity. We assessed bias control using the Cochrane Hepato-Biliary domains and the quality of the evidence with GRADE.
Eleven trials fulfilled our inclusion criteria. One trial did not report clinical outcomes. We included the remaining 10 randomised clinical trials, involving 810 participants with cirrhosis and oesophageal varices, in our analyses. The intervention comparisons were carvedilol versus propranolol (nine trials), or nadolol (one trial). Six trials were of short duration (mean 6 (range 1 to 12) weeks), while four were of longer duration (13.5 (6 to 30) months). Three trials evaluated primary prevention; three evaluated secondary prevention; while four evaluated both primary and secondary prevention. We classified all trials as at 'high risk of bias'. We gathered mortality data from seven trials involving 507 participants; no events occurred in four of these. Sixteen of 254 participants receiving carvedilol and 19 of 253 participants receiving propranolol or nadolol died (RR 0.86, 95% CI 0.48 to 1.53; I = 0%, low-quality evidence). There appeared to be no differences between carvedilol versus traditional, non-selective beta-blockers and the risks of upper gastrointestinal bleeding (RR 0.77, 95% CI 0.43 to 1.37; 810 participants; 10 trials; I = 45%, very low-quality evidence) and serious adverse events (RR 0.97, 95% CI 0.67 to 1.42; 810 participants; 10 trials; I = 14%, low-quality evidence). Significantly more deaths, episodes of upper gastrointestinal bleeding and serious adverse events occurred in the long-term trials but there was not enough information to determine whether there were differences between carvedilol and traditional, non-selective beta-blockers, by trial duration. There was also insufficient information to detect differences in the effects of these interventions in trials evaluating primary or secondary prevention. There appeared to be no differences in the risk of non-serious adverse events between carvedilol versus its comparators (RR 0.55, 95% CI 0.23 to 1.29; 596 participants; 6 trials; I = 88%; very low-quality evidence). Use of carvedilol was associated with a greater reduction in hepatic venous pressure gradient than traditional, non-selective beta-blockers both in absolute (MD -1.75 mmHg, 95% CI -2.60 to -0.89; 368 participants; 6 trials; I = 0%; low-quality evidence) and percentage terms (MD -8.02%, 95% CI -11.49% to -4.55%; 368 participants; 6 trials; I = 0%; low-quality evidence). However, we did not observe a concomitant reduction in the number of participants who failed to achieve a sufficient haemodynamic response (RR 0.76, 95% CI 0.57 to 1.02; 368 participants; 6 trials; I = 42%; very low-quality evidence) or in clinical outcomes.
AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: We found no clear beneficial or harmful effects of carvedilol versus traditional, non-selective beta-blockers on mortality, upper gastrointestinal bleeding, serious or non-serious adverse events despite the fact that carvedilol was more effective at reducing the hepatic venous pressure gradient. However, the evidence was of low or very low quality, and hence the findings are uncertain. Additional evidence is required from adequately powered, long-term, double-blind, randomised clinical trials, which evaluate both clinical and haemodynamic outcomes.
对于肝硬化、门静脉高压和胃食管静脉曲张患者,推荐使用非选择性β受体阻滞剂预防出血。卡维地洛是一种具有额外内在α受体阻滞作用的非选择性β受体阻滞剂,在降低门静脉压力方面可能优于传统的非选择性β受体阻滞剂,因此可降低上消化道出血风险。
评估卡维地洛与传统非选择性β受体阻滞剂相比,对患有肝硬化和胃食管静脉曲张的成年人的有益和有害影响。
我们将Cochrane肝胆病对照试验注册库、Cochrane对照试验中央注册库(CENTRAL)、MEDLINE、Embase、LILACS和科学引文索引中的检索与手工检索相结合。最后一次检索更新时间为2018年5月8日。
我们纳入了比较卡维地洛与传统非选择性β受体阻滞剂的随机临床试验,无论其发表状态、盲法或语言如何。我们纳入了评估肝硬化且已证实有胃食管静脉曲张的成年人上消化道出血一级和二级预防的试验。
三位综述作者(AZ、RJ和LH)独立提取数据。主要结局指标为死亡率、上消化道出血和严重不良事件。我们进行了荟萃分析,并使用风险比(RR)或均值差(MD)呈现结果,两者均带有95%置信区间(CI),并将I值作为异质性的指标。我们使用Cochrane肝胆病领域评估偏倚控制,并使用GRADE评估证据质量。
11项试验符合我们的纳入标准。1项试验未报告临床结局。我们将其余10项随机临床试验纳入分析,这些试验涉及810名患有肝硬化和食管静脉曲张的参与者。干预比较为卡维地洛与普萘洛尔(9项试验)或纳多洛尔(1项试验)。6项试验持续时间较短(平均6(范围1至12)周),而4项试验持续时间较长(13.5(6至30)个月)。3项试验评估一级预防;3项评估二级预防;4项评估一级和二级预防。我们将所有试验归类为“高偏倚风险”。我们从7项涉及507名参与者的试验中收集了死亡率数据;其中4项未发生事件。接受卡维地洛的254名参与者中有16人死亡,接受普萘洛尔或纳多洛尔的253名参与者中有19人死亡(RR 0.86,95%CI 0.48至1.53;I = 0%,低质量证据)。卡维地洛与传统非选择性β受体阻滞剂在上消化道出血风险(RR 0.77,95%CI 0.43至1.37;810名参与者;10项试验;I = 45%,极低质量证据)和严重不良事件(RR 0.97,95%CI 0.67至1.42;810名参与者;10项试验;I = 14%,低质量证据)方面似乎没有差异。长期试验中发生的死亡、上消化道出血发作和严重不良事件明显更多,但没有足够信息确定按试验持续时间来看卡维地洛与传统非选择性β受体阻滞剂之间是否存在差异。在评估一级或二级预防的试验中,也没有足够信息检测这些干预措施效果的差异。卡维地洛与其对照药物在非严重不良事件风险方面似乎没有差异(RR 0.55,95%CI 0.23至1.29;596名参与者;6项试验;I = 88%;极低质量证据)。与传统非选择性β受体阻滞剂相比,使用卡维地洛在绝对(MD -1.75 mmHg,95%CI -2.60至-0.89;368名参与者;6项试验;I = 0%;低质量证据)和百分比方面(MD -8.02%,95%CI -11.49%至-4.55%;368名参与者;6项试验;I = 0%;低质量证据)能更大程度地降低肝静脉压力梯度。然而,我们未观察到未能实现充分血流动力学反应的参与者数量(RR 0.76,95%CI 0.57至1.02;368名参与者;6项试验;I = 42%;极低质量证据)或临床结局有相应降低。
尽管卡维地洛在降低肝静脉压力梯度方面更有效,但我们发现卡维地洛与传统非选择性β受体阻滞剂相比,在死亡率、上消化道出血、严重或非严重不良事件方面没有明显的有益或有害影响。然而,证据质量低或极低,因此研究结果不确定。需要来自有足够样本量、长期、双盲、随机临床试验的更多证据,这些试验要同时评估临床和血流动力学结局。