| Literature DB >> 31183006 |
Michael Dwinata1, David Dwi Putera2, Muhamad Fajri Adda'i3, Putra Nur Hidayat4, Irsan Hasan4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Variceal hemorrhage is associated with high mortality and is the cause of death for 20-30% of patients with cirrhosis. Nonselective β blockers (NSBBs) or endoscopic variceal ligation (EVL) are recommended for primary prevention of variceal bleeding in patients with medium to large esophageal varices. Meanwhile, combination of EVL and NSBBs is the recommended approach for the secondary prevention. Carvedilol has greater efficacy than other NSBBs as it decreases intrahepatic resistance. We hypothesized that there was no difference between carvedilol and EVL intervention for primary and secondary prevention of variceal bleeding in cirrhosis patients. AIM: To evaluate the efficacy of carvedilol compared to EVL for primary and secondary prevention of variceal bleeding in cirrhotic patients.Entities:
Keywords: Carvedilol; Liver cirrhosis; Portal hypertension; Prophylaxis; Variceal hemorrhage
Year: 2019 PMID: 31183006 PMCID: PMC6547295 DOI: 10.4254/wjh.v11.i5.464
Source DB: PubMed Journal: World J Hepatol
Search strategy
| CENTRAL | (Cirrhosis OR “esophageal varices” OR “oesophageal varices”) AND (carvedilol) AND (ligation OR “variceal band ligation” OR “endoscopic variceal ligation” OR VBL OR EVL) | 20 |
| MEDLINE | (Cirrhosis OR “esophageal varices” OR “oesophageal varices”) AND (carvedilol) AND (ligation or “variceal band ligation” OR “endoscopic variceal ligation” OR VBL OR EVL) | 5 |
| EMBASE | Cirrhosis AND Carvedilol AND Ligation | 3 |
| A manual search of abstracts and citation index from identified paper’s reference list and | “portal hypertension”, “cirrhosis”, “carvedilol”, “endoscopic variceal ligation” | 54 |
Figure 1The results of the literature search process used in the current study, depicted using a Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses flow diagram.
Characteristic of included studies
| Tripathi et al[ | No | Carvedilol | 54.2 ± 9.4 | 77 | 6.25 mg (starting dose) daily, with target dose of 12.5 mg daily | 24 | |
| EVL | 54.5 ±11.1 | 75 | Every two weeks until eradication | 24 | |||
| Shah et al[ | No | Carvedilol | 48.3 ± 11.3 | 82 | 6.25 mg daily, with target dose of 6.25 mg twice a day | up to 24 | |
| EVL | 47.2 ± 13.2 | 86 | Every three weeks until eradication | up to 24 | |||
| Khan et al[ | No | Carvedilol | 52.1 ± 14.7 | 125 | 12.5 mg daily | 6 | |
| EVL | 54.1±14.3 | 125 | Not mentioned | 6 | |||
| Abd ElRahim et al[ | No | Carvedilol | 51.2 ± 11.0 | 84 | starting dosage of 6.25 mg daily, titrated up every 4 days to reach up to 12.5–50 mg | up to 12 | |
| EVL | 50.6 ± 5.9 | 88 | Every two weeks until eradication | up to 12 | |||
| Smith et al[ | Yes | Carvedilol | 51 ± 10.9 | 32 | 6.25 mg daily, with target dose 12.5 of mg daily | 29 | |
| EVL | 50 ± 13.0 | 31 | Not mentioned | 29 | |||
| Stanley et al[ | Yes | Carvedilol | 51.4 ± 10.8 | 33 | 6.25 mg daily, with target dose 12.5 of mg daily | up to 60 | |
| EVL | 49.6 ± 12.87 | 31 | Every two weeks until eradication | up to 60 | |||
| Kumar et al[ | Yes | Carvedilol | 44.1 ± 8.5 (overall) | 47 | Not mentioned | 11.1 - 21.7 | |
| EVL | 44.1 ± 8.5 (overall) | 56 | Not mentioned | 11.1 - 21.7 | |||
EVL: Endoscopic variceal ligation.
Figure 2A risk of bias graph showing the researchers’ opinions on each risk of bias item (presented as percentages across all the seven included studies).
Figure 3A risk of bias summary showing the researchers’ opinions on each risk of bias item for each of the seven included studies.
Figure 4Meta-analysis forest plot of primary outcomes in primary prevention studies. A: Variceal bleeding; B: All-cause mortality; C: Bleeding-related mortality.
Figure 5Meta-analysis forest plot of secondary outcomes in primary prevention studies. A: Side-effects of treatment; B: Compliance.
Figure 6Meta-analysis forest plot of primary outcomes in secondary prevention studies. A: Variceal rebleeding; B: All-cause mortality.
Summary of findings for the main comparison
| Variceal bleed in primary prevention (Grade I) | RR 0.38 | 250 | ++−− | Benefit for Carvedilol group |
| (0.15-0.93) | (1 Study) | low | ||
| Variceal bleed in primary prevention (Grade II) | RR 0.92 | 492 | +++− | |
| (0.42-2.41) | (3 Studies) | moderate | ||
| All-cause mortality in primary prevention | RR 1.10 | 320 | ++++ | |
| (0.76-1.58) | (2 Studies) | high | ||
| Bleeding-related mortality in primary prevention | RR 1.02 | 320 | ++++ | |
| (0.34-3.10) | (2 Studies) | high | ||
| Side effect of treatment in primary prevention | RR 4.18 | 276 | +++− | Benefit for EVL group |
| (2.19-7.95) | (2 Studies) | moderate | ||
| Compliance in primary prevention | RR 0.90 | 122 | +++− | |
| (0.73-1.11) | (2 Studies) | low | ||
| Rebleeding events in secondary prevention | RR 1.10 | 230 | ++−− | |
| (0.75-1.61) | (3 Studies) | low | ||
| All-cause mortality in secondary prevention | RR 0.51 | 230 | ++−− | Benefit for Carvedilol group |
| (0.33-0.79) | (3 Studies) | low |
GRADE: Grading of Recommendations, Assessment, Development and Evaluation; Patient or population: Portal hypertension or cirrhosis patients; Comparison: Endoscopic variceal ligation; Settings: Secondary or tertiary hospital; Intervention: Carvedilol. GRADE Working Group grades of evidence. High quality: Further research is very unlikely to change our confidence in the estimate of effect; Moderate quality: Further research is likely to have an important impact on our confidence in the estimate of effect and may change the estimate; Low quality: Further research is very likely to have an important impact on our confidence in the estimate of effect and is likely to change the estimate; Very low quality: We are very uncertain about the estimate.