| Literature DB >> 28074149 |
Sara Blasco-Algora1, José Masegosa-Ataz1, Sonia Alonso1, Maria-Luisa Gutiérrez1, Conrado Fernández-Rodriguez1.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Non-selective β-blockers (NSBBs) are widely prescribed in patients with cirrhosis for primary and secondary prophylaxis of bleeding oesophageal varices. Furthermore, it has been suggested that the clinical benefits of NSBBs may extend beyond their haemodynamic effects. Recently, a potentially harmful effect has been described in patients with refractory ascites or spontaneous bacterial peritonitis.Entities:
Keywords: ASCITES; CIRRHOSIS; HEPATORENAL SYNDROME; OESOPHAGEAL VARICES
Year: 2016 PMID: 28074149 PMCID: PMC5174812 DOI: 10.1136/bmjgast-2016-000104
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open Gastroenterol ISSN: 2054-4774
Figure 1Effects of NSBBs on advanced cirrhosis: hypothesis of the ‘therapeutic window’. Adapted from Krag et al.15AKI, acute kidney injury; BT, bacterial translocation; BP, blood pressure; HRS, hepatorenal syndrome; MAP, mean arterial pressure; SNS, sympathetic nervous system; RA, refractory ascites; SBP, spontaneous bacterial peritonitis; PICD, postparacentesis-induced circulatory dysfunction.
Figure 2Beneficial effects (dotted line), deleterious effects (discontinued line). In advanced cirrhosis, especially in presence of cardiomyopathy, NSBB therapy decreases cardiac output leading to EABV reduction which in turn contributes to HRS. Conversely, NSBBs' positive effects include reduction of gut permeability and the risk of SBP. EABV, effective arterial blood volume; HRS, hepatorenal syndrome; NSBBs, non-selective β-blockers; SBP, spontaneous bacterial peritonitis.
Studies on the beneficial or deleterious effect of NSBBs on advanced cirrhosis
| Author, year, Ref | Design (n) | End point | Characteristics (RA) | Presence of oesophageal varices non-BB vs BB | CPT-C non-BB vs BB (%) | MAP non-BB vs BB | Doses BB | Follow-up (month) | HR | Other outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sertsé | Observational | Long-term survival | RA (100%) | 4% vs 100% | 61% vs 74% | 123 vs 103 | 114 mg/day | 8 m | HR 2.61 (1.63 to 4.19) | 1-year probability survival propranolol 19%vs 64% p <0.0001 |
| Mandorfer | Observational | Impact of SBP on BB on survival | SBP (NS) | 60% vs 94% | 53% vs 67% | 83 vs 77 | NS | 9.6 (147 person year) | HR 1.64 (1.1 to 2.3) | Patients with SBP on BB increase in mortality risk of 58% |
| Leithead | Observational | Mortality | Ascites on transplant list (117 (76 matched, 36.5%)) | Previous variceal haemorrhage | NS | 89 vs 86 | 74.8% P (80 mg/day) | 2.4 (72 days) | HR 0.55 (0.32 to 0.95) | Mortality after listing 23.2% BB vs 34.8% no-BB |
| Bossen | Post hoc | Mortality or hospitalisation | Ascites in RCT of satavaptan/placebo | Previous variceal haemorrhage | 28% vs 24% | 85 vs 83 | 159 high dose (>80 mg/day) P | 12 (52 weeks) | 0.92 (0.72 to 1.18) | HR high dose vs no-BB users 0.8 (0.55 to 1.20) |
| Mookerjee | Observational prospective, 349 | Mortality at 28 days | ACLF (NS) | NS. Previous gastrointestinal bleeding 17% vs 58% | NS | 79 vs 78 | 40 mg/day (68%) | 12 (56 weeks) | 0.60 (0.36 to 0.98) | 1-year mortality NSBB vs no-NSBB 52% vs 56% p=0.35 |
| Gianelli | Observational, retrospective 526 | Cirrhotic cardiomyopathy | Transplant waitlist (NS) | NS | NS | NS | NS | NS | NS | Systolic dysfunction was higher in MELD>25 with BB, and similar in MELD<25 regardless BB |
| Aday | Retrospective, 2419 | In-hospital mortality | Portal hypertension (100%) | 51% vs 49% | Severe ascites no BB 62% vs 37% on BB | NS | NS | NS | NS | The highest mortality was among those with cirrhosis and severe ascites no-BB (23.2%, compared with 6.5% BB) |
| Robins | Observational retrospective, 114 | Survival | Cirrhosis undergoing elective paracentesis (100%) | 54% vs 100% | 64% vs 64% | NS. | 48.9 mg/day | Median 10 (2–72) | NS | Median survival BB vs no-BB 18 vs 11 months p=0.93 |
| Kim | Nested case–control, 2250 | Association BB-AKI | RA on transplant list (NS) | NS | NS | NS | NS | Median 20.3 (3–201) | NS | |
| Bhutta | Prospective analysis, 717 | Survival | Ascites | 17% vs 31% | NS | NS | NS | NS | NS | Survival 58 days in BB vs 32 days n-BB |
| Chirapongsathorn | Meta-analysis 3 RCT and 8 observational studies, 3145 | Mortality | Ascites | NS | NS | NS | NS | NS | RR: 0.95 (0.67 to 1.35) | Mortality rate 6 months BB vs no-BB 52% vs 42.5% |
| Kalambokis | Observational retrospective, 171 | Mortality | Ascites | NS | NS | NS | NS | 3 years | NS | Median survival |
| Kimer | Retrospective cohort, 61 | In-hospital mortality | Ascites | 31% vs 82%* | NS | NS | Median | ∼3.5 years | NS | No difference in survival. Complications 76% no-BB vs 78% BB |
*Thirty-seven per cent of patients in non-BB group and 13% in the BB group were not characterised with oesophageal endoscopy.
ACLF, acute-on-chronic liver failure; AKI, acute kidney injury; BB, β-blockers; C, carvedilol; CP, Child-Pugh Class; CPT, Child-Push Turcotte; MAP, mean arterial pressure; MELD, Model for End-stage Liver Disease; NS, not stated; NSBB, non-selective β-blocker; P, propranolol; RA, refractory ascites; RCT, randomised controlled trial; RR, relative risk; SBP, spontaneous bacterial peritonitis.