| Literature DB >> 23796325 |
Anthony J Barron1, Nabeela Zaman, Graham D Cole, Roland Wensel, Darlington O Okonko, Darrel P Francis.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Patients trying life-preserving agents such as beta-blockers may be discouraged by listings of harmful effects provided in good faith by doctors, drug information sheets, and media. We systematically review the world experience of side-effect information in blinded, placebo-controlled beta-blockade in heart failure. We present information for a physician advising a patient experiencing an unwanted symptom and suspecting the drug.Entities:
Keywords: Beta-blockers; Heart failure; Side-effects
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23796325 PMCID: PMC3819624 DOI: 10.1016/j.ijcard.2013.05.068
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Cardiol ISSN: 0167-5273 Impact factor: 4.164
Example listing of side-effects of beta-blockers.
This is the information on side effects given to patients and their physicians according to drug information leaflets and the electronic Medicines Compendium website (http://www.medicines.org.uk/emc).
| Beta-blocker related side-effects | |
|---|---|
| Cardiovascular | Bradycardia, interference with normal heart rate, irregular heart rate, slowed atrio-ventricular conduction, atrio-ventricular block, palpitations, cardiac failure, hypotension, orthostatic hypotension, angina, oedema, fluid overload, hypervolaemia, disturbances of peripheral circulation (cold extremities, peripheral vascular disease, exacerbation of intermittent claudication, gangrene in patients with poor circulation and Raynaud's phenomenon) |
| Respiratory | Dyspnoea, shortness of breath with or without strenuous physical activity, bronchospasm, wheeze, asthma in predisposed patients, nasal congestion, runny nose, flu like symptoms, bronchitis, pneumonia, upper respiratory tract infection |
| Gastro-intestinal | Abdominal pain, dry mouth, nausea, vomiting, constipation, diarrhoea, dyspepsia, flatulence, upset stomach, hepatitis and deranged liver enzymes |
| Genito-urinary | Impotence, disturbances of sexual desire and performance, erectile dysfunction renal failure and renal function abnormalities in patients with diffuse vascular disease and/or underlying renal insufficiency, micturition disorders, urinary incontinence in women, urinary tract infection |
| Neurological | Tiredness, dizziness, depression, depressed mood, headache, pre-syncope, syncope, fainting paraesthesia, tingling or pins and needles, muscle cramps, muscle weakness, sleep disorders, nightmares, asthenia, inability to think clearly, sleepiness or difficulty sleeping, change in personality, hallucinations, hearing impairment |
| Skin & subcutaneous tissues | Skin reactions e.g. sensitivity to light, allergic exanthema, dermatitis, hypersensitivity reactions, angioedema, increased sweating, urticaria, pruritus, psoriatic and lichen planus like skin lesions, alopecia, worsening of existing psoriasis |
| Metabolism & nutrition | Dyslipidaemia, hypercholesterolemia, weight gain, impaired blood glucose control, deranged blood glucose control in existing diabetics |
| Haematological | Changes in blood results including anaemia, thrombocytopenia and leucopoenia, effects on blood clotting causing unexplained or easy bruising, worsening or new blood vessel disorders |
| Musculoskeletal | Joint inflammation, pain in extremities, myasthenia gravis |
| Eye disorders | Visual impairment, decreased lacrimation and dry eyes, eye irritation, conjunctivitis |
Supplementary Fig. 1Funnel plots for 10 commonly reported side-effects. The y axis for all plots is the log odds ratio of a treatment effect (i.e. beta-blocker causing symptom to the right, alleviating symptom to the left), with the dark line the overall log odds ratio. The x axis is the standard error as a measure of the sample size. For most of these side-effects there is spread of values to either side of the overall log odds ratio, with smaller studies (larger standard error) generally diverging furthest from the overall log odds ratio, which does not suggest publication bias.
Fig. 1An example of how the proportion of symptoms non-pharmacological has been calculated for a single listed side-effect on beta-blocker therapy. The square chart represents 100 patients with heart failure. The open circles show how many would expect to experience the side effect without the drug. The filled circles show how many additional patients would experience the side effect if all 100 took the drug. From this the physician and the patient can visualise the proportion of side effects that are non-pharmacological: it is the proportion of circles that are open. The spreadsheet that calculates these proportions, and automatically displays the square chart, operates on the free and open-source LibreOffice (www.libreoffice.org) or the widely-available Microsoft Excel. It is downloadable as an Online Supplement of this article.
Formal random-effects meta-analysis of the principal analysis (green denotes significantly more common in the placebo arm, amber denotes no significant difference between arms, and red significantly more common in the active drug arm). The proportion of symptoms non-pharmacological has been shown alongside this analysis (see Methods for calculation of this value).
Description of trials included in this study.
| Trial | N | Treatment groups | Clinical setting | Total mortality (%) | Mean follow-up | Run-in period | Reported outcome | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Drug | Placebo | |||||||
| CIBIS | 641 | Bisoprolol vs placebo | NYHA III–IV, EF ≤ 40% | 16.6 | 20.8 | 22.8 | No | Increasing β-blocker dose in severe HF confers functional benefit |
| CIBIS-II | 2647 | Bisoprolol vs placebo | NYHA III–IV, EF ≤ 35% | 11.8 | 17.3 | 15.6 | No | Bisoprolol reduces mortality in CHF patients at all tolerated dose levels |
| BEST | 2708 | Bucindolol vs placebo | NYHA III–IV, EF ≤ 35% | 30.0 | 33.0 | 24 | No | Bucindolol results in no significant overall mortality benefit in HF patients |
| CAPRICORN | 1959 | Carvedilol vs placebo | Post MI, EF ≤ 40% | 11.9 | 15.4 | 15.6 | No | Carvedilol reduces all-cause and cardiovascular mortality, and recurrent, non-fatal myocardial infarctions. |
| COPERNICUS | 2289 | Carvedilol vs placebo | NYHA III–IV, EF ≤ 25% | 12.8 | 19.7 | 10.4 | No | Carvedilol reduces mortality by 34% in HF patients, ameliorates severity of HF |
| PRECISE | 278 | Carvedilol vs placebo | NYHA III–IV, EF ≤ 35% | N/A | N/A | 6 | Open-label carvedilol | Carvedilol produces important clinical benefits in patients with moderate–severe HF |
| US Heart Failure Study Group I | 366 | Carvedilol vs placebo | NYHA III–IV, EF ≤ 35% | 0.9 | 4.0 | 12 | Open-label carvedilol | Carvedilol reduces clinical progression in mildly symptomatic, well compensated HF patients |
| Krum et al. | 49 | Carvedilol vs placebo | NYHA III–IV, EF ≤ 35% | 6.0 | 18.0 | 3.5 | Open-label carvedilol | Carvedilol produces clinical & haemodynamic improvement in severe HF |
| MERIT-HF | 3991 | Metoprolol vs Placebo | NYHA II–IV, EF ≤ 40% | 7.2 | 11.0 | 12 | Single-blind placebo | Metoprolol in addition to optimum standard therapy improves survival in HF patients |
| The MDC study | 383 | Metoprolol vs placebo | NYHA II–III, EF ≤ 40% | 11.9 | 11.1 | 12 | Open-label metoprolol | Metoprolol prevents clinical deterioration, improves symptoms and cardiac function in idiopathic dilated cardiomyopathy |
| SENIORS | 2128 | Nebivolol vs placebo | EF ≤ 35% or HF hospitalisation in last 12 months | 15.8 | 18.1 | 21 | No | Nebivolol is an effective and well tolerated β-Blocker in the elderly |
| Wisenbaugh et al. | 44 | Nebivolol vs placebo | EF ≤ 40%, NYHA II–III | N/A | N/A | 3 | Placebo (patients replaced) | Nebivolol improves stroke volume, EF and LVEDP |
| MOCHA study | 345 | Carvedilol vs placebo | EF ≤ 35%, NYHA II–III | 4.6 | 15.5 | 6 | Open-label carvedilol | Carvedilol improves mortality and risk of hospitalisations in HF patients |
Fig. 2PRISMA flow diagram of the studies.
Fig. 3The proportions of patients where beta-blocker is causative (± confidence intervals) for 5 side-effects statistically more prevalent in the beta-blocker arm of RCTs.
Fig. 4Forest Plot of 5 frequently discussed perceived side-effects of beta-blocker use — fatigue, hypotension, hyperglycaemia, dizziness and bradycardia.
Fig. 5Forest Plot of drug withdrawal (A) and serious adverse events (B) amongst RCTs of double-blind beta-blocker versus placebo controlled trials. Overall there are more withdrawals and serious adverse events amongst participants in the placebo groups.
Fig. 6A rational side-effect note to give patients regarding beta blockers for heart failure. When advising patients to disregard regulatory notes because they are incorrect, it would be useful to have a replacement note whose content is supported by the blinded placebo-controlled studies. This proposed note is designed to show the available information simply for use by patients with heart failure.