| Literature DB >> 34642269 |
Seung Joo Kang1, Young Sin Cho2, Tae Hee Lee3, Seong-Eun Kim4, Han Seung Ryu5, Jung-Wook Kim6, Seon-Young Park7, Yoo Jin Lee8, Jeong Eun Shin9.
Abstract
BACKGROUND/AIMS: Constipation is a common gastrointestinal problem in the elderly. Because of the limitations of life style modifications and the comorbidity, laxative use is also very common. Therefore, this study reviews the latest literature on the effect and safety of laxative in the elderly.Entities:
Keywords: Aged; Constipation; Laxatives; Systematic review
Year: 2021 PMID: 34642269 PMCID: PMC8521458 DOI: 10.5056/jnm20210
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Neurogastroenterol Motil ISSN: 2093-0879 Impact factor: 4.924
Characteristics of Studies Comparing Laxative With Placebo or Comparing Laxatives of Same Types
| Study, country | Comparison | Design | Eligible population | Constipation criteria | Intervention and duration | Number of patients and mean age | Primary outcome | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bulk laxatives | ||||||||
| Ewerth et al[ | Bulk vs Placebo | Double-blind cross-over study | Constipated patients with diverticuli | Infrequent (3-4 day interval) and painful defecation |
A: Psyllium 6 g bid B: Placebo 8 wk for each (4-wk washout) |
9 (F 6) Mean age 68 (range 62-77) yr |
Transit time BMs/wk Abdominal symptoms |
No significant difference A: 6.9 B: 7.1 (NS) Symptoms improved with psyllium |
| Finlay[ | Bulk vs Placebo | Open, randomized, placebo-controlled, parallel study | Elderly patients with chronic constipation in continuing care | Chronic constipation with need for regular laxative, suppositories and/or manual evacuation |
A: Bran 1.5-4.5 g qd B: Regular diet 6 wk |
A: 6 (F 6) B: 6 (F 6) Mean age 80 ± 5 yr |
Stool consistency Bowel frequency Suppository usage |
1. Significantly improved with treatment 2. BMs/wk A: 2.83 ± 0.91 B: 2.25 ± 0.82 (NS) SBMs/wk A: 2.63 ± 1.10 B: 0.02 ± 1.92 3. No difference for laxative use |
| Rajala et al[ | Bulk vs Placebo | Randomized, double-blind study | Hospitalized elderly patients | Defecation less than once daily and with difficulty |
A: Yoghurt + Bran, 150 mL bid B: Yoghurt bid 2 wk |
A: 18 B: 15 Mean age 78 yr |
BMs/wk Abdominal pain and overall symptoms Need for laxatives |
A: 5.8 B: 4.5 Abdominal pain and overall symptoms improved in group A Need for laxative: A: 1.3 B: 1.7 |
| Cheskin et al[ | Bulk vs Placebo | Single-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled, crossover study | Community-living older men and women with chronic constipation | < 3 BMs/wk and/or feeling of incomplete evacuation and/or hard stool with straining > 25% of time |
A: Psyllium 6 g qid B: Placebo 4 wk for each |
(F 5, M 5) Mean age 66 (range 66-87) yr |
Total gut transit time BMs/wk Consistency |
A: 30.0 hr B: 53.9 hr A: 9.1 B: 5.6 Consistency did not improve significantly |
| Chokhavatia et al[ | Bulk vs Bulk | Unblinded, randomized study | Outpatients age range 55-81 yr | Regular laxative use |
A: Calcium polycarbophil 2 g qd B: Psyllium 9.5 g qd 3 wk |
42 Age range 55-81 yr |
BMs/wk Consistency Preference |
A: 8.3 B: 9.1 Consistency score was significantly high in A More patients preferred A as it produced less gas |
| Osmotic laxatives | ||||||||
| Wesselius-De Casparis et al[ | Osmotic vs Placebo | Multicenter, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, parallel study | Elderly patients with chronic constipation | Regular laxative use |
A: lactulose syrup 15 mL qd B: Placebo 3 wk |
A: 54 B: 49 Mean age > 60 yr | Treatment success if the patient needed no laxatives at all or only once in 21 day | A: 86% B: 60%a |
| Sanders[ | Osmotic vs Placebo | Randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, parallel study | Elderly constipated patients living in nursing home | ≤ 3 BM/wk and ≥ 1 constipation related symptom |
A: lactulose syrup 30 mL qd B: Placebo 12 wk |
A: 20 (F 17) B: 25 (F 22) Mean age 84.7 yr in A 86.8 yr in B |
BM/wk Reduction in symptoms |
A: 4.9 B: 3.6 Significantly improved with lactulose |
| Vanderdonckt et al[ | Osmotic vs Placebo | Double-blind, cross-over study | Elderly patients with chronic constipation | ≤ 3 BMs per wk without laxative use and ≥ 1 symptom such as hard stools, pain |
A: Lactitol 20 g qd B: Placebo 4 wk for each |
46 Mean age 84 yr |
BMs/wk Consistency Need for laxatives |
BMs/wk increased with lactitolc Consistency improved with lactitolc Less need for rectally administered laxatives |
| Dipalma et al[ | Osmotic vs Placebo | Double-blind, placebo-controlled, parallel study | Adults and elderly who met defined criteria for chronic constipation | Modified Rome criteria |
A: PEG 3350 17 g qd B: Placebo 6 mo |
A: 204 (F 175) B: 100 (F 83) (elderly: 75) Mean age of elderly were not specified | Relief of modified Rome criteria for constipation for 50% or more |
Total: A 61.4% B 21.8% Elderly patients: A 56% vs B 11% |
| Lederle et al[ | Osmotic vs Osmotic | Randomized, double-blind, cross-over study | Men aged 65 yr to 86 yr with chronic constipation | ≤ 3 SBM/wk, ≤1 BM/day with current laxatives and at least one related chronic symptom such as straining, hard stool |
A: Lactulose syrup 30-60 mL qd B: Sorbitol 30-60 mL qd 4 wk for each(2-wk washout) |
30 (M 30) Mean age 72 (range 65-86) |
BM/wk Number of day/wk with BM Consistency |
A: 7.02 B: 6.71 (NS) A: 5.31 B: 5.23 (NS) 60% vs 67% of BM reported normal |
| Seinelä et al[ | Osmotic vs Osmotic | Randomized, double-blind, parallel-group study | Elderly institutionalized, constipated patients who have used PEG with electrolyte at a stable dose | Regular use of PEG |
A: PEG 4000 without electrolyte 12 g qd B: PEG 4000 with electrolyte 12 g qd 4 wk |
A: 30 (F 18) B: 32 (F 23) Mean age A: 86.4 yr B: 84.8 yr |
BM/wk at week 4 Proportion of normal stool consistency |
A: 8.5 ± 4.5B: 8.4 ± 3.6 (NS) A: 70% B: 52% (NS) |
| Chassagne et al[ | Osmotic vs Osmotic | Randomized, single-blind, parallel-group study | Patients aged 70 yr and older with a history of chronic constipation | Rome I criteria |
A: PEG 4000 10-30 g qd B: Lactulose 10-30 g qd 6 mo |
A: 118 (F 90) B: 127 (F 96) Mean age A: 82.7 ± 7.4 yr B: 81.8 ± 7.9 yr |
BMs/wk Consistency AEs |
A:7.0-7.3 B:5.5-6.2 Improved consistency with PEG 4000 See |
| Softener | ||||||||
| Hyland and Foran[ | Softener vs Placebo | Randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, cross-over study | Hospitalized elderly patients in geriatric ward | Chronic constipation |
A: DSS 100 mg tid B: Placebo 4 wk for each |
40 Mean age over 60 yr |
BMs/wk Overall symptom improvement |
A: 3.3 B: 2.5 Symptom significantly improved with DSS |
| Fain et al[ | Softener vs Softener | Randomized, single-blinded, parallel study | Institutionalized elderly patients | Chronic functional constipation dependent on laxative use |
A: DSS 100 mg qd B: DSS 100 mg bid C: DCS 240 mg qd Placebo 2 wk → treatment 3 wk for each |
A: 13 (F 12) B: 17 (F 15) C: 16 (F 13) Mean age A: 83.4 yr B: 82.2 yr C: 80.8 yr |
BMs/wk Laxative use/ wk |
A: 1.50 ± 1.06 → 1.95 ± 1.79 B: 1.76 ± 1.26 → 2.29 ± 1.14 C: 1.75 ± 1.33 → 2.83 ± 1.73 A: 1.38 → 1.05 B: 1.03 → 0.92 C: 1.38 → 0.85 |
aP < 0.05, bP < 0.01, cP < 0.001.
F, female; M, male; qd, once a day; bid, 2 times a day; tid, 3 times a day; qid, 4 times a day; BMs, bowel movements; NS, not significant; AEs, adverse effects; SBMs, spontaneous bowel movements; PEG, polyethylene glycol; DSS, dioctyl sodium sulfosuccinate; DCS, dioctly calcium sulfosuccinate.
Figure 1The Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-analyses (PRISMA) flowchart of the systematic literature review and selection of literature.
Characteristics of Studies Comparing Different Types of Laxatives or Using Combination Agents
| Study, country | Comparison | Design | Eligible population | Constipation criteria | Intervention and duration | Number of patients and mean age | Primary outcome | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kinnunen and Salokannel[ | Bulk vs Osmotic | Randomized, cross-over study | Geriatric long-stay patients aged 65 yr or older | Patients using laxatives |
A: Magnesium hydroxide 25 mL qd B: Bulk laxative 8.7 g qd 8 wk |
64 (F 47) Mean age 81 yr |
BMs/wk Consistency score Need for laxatives for 4 wk |
A: 3.3 B: 2.6 A: 1 B: 0.8 A: 2.3 B: 3.3 |
| Kinnunen et al[ | Bulk + stimulant vs Osmotic | Open, randomized controlled, cross-over study | Geriatric long-stay patients aged 65-94 yr with constipation | BMs < 2/wk for more than 3 mo |
A: Agiolax 20 mL qd B: Lactulose 30 mL qd 5 wk for each |
30 (F 25) Mean age 81.8 ± 7.5 yr |
BMs/wk Consistency Bisacodyl doses/5 wk |
A: 4.5 ± 2.3 B: 2.2 ± 0.9 Loose stools more common with Agiolax A: 1.0 ± 1.4 B: 1.7 ± 2.5 (NS) |
| Passmore et al[ | Bulk + stimulant vs Osmotic | Randomized, double-blind, cross-over study | Long stay elderly patients or nursing home care with a history of chronic constipation | History of chronic constipation (< 3 BMs/wk) or need for regular laxatives |
A: Agiolax 10 mL qd B: Lactulose 15 mL bid 2 wk for each (3-5 day wash-out) |
77 (F 57) Mean age 82.9 yr |
BMs/wk Consistency score |
A: 5.6 B: 4.2 Stool consistency score was significantly higher for Agiolax |
| Pers and Pers[ | Bulk + stimulant vs Bulk + stimulant | Open, randomized, controlled, cross-over study | Hospitalized elderly patients with constipation | Chronic constipation necessitating laxative treatment |
A: Agiolax 1 sachet qd (15 mg senna) B: Lunelax 1 sachet qd (25 mg senna) 2 wk for each |
20 (F 16) Mean age 83 yr | BMs/wk | A: 3.3 B: 3.9 |
aP < 0.05, bP < 0.01.
F, female; BMs, bowel movements; qd, 4 times a day; bid, 2 times a day; NS, not significant.
Characteristics of Studies Comparing Novel Medications With Placebo
| Study, country | Comparison | Design | Eligible population | Constipation criteria | Intervention and duration | Number of patients and mean age | Primary outcome | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Camilleri et al[ | Prucalopride vs Placebo | Randomized, double-blind, Phase II, placebo-controlled, dose escalation study | Elderly (> 65 yr) patients with constipation residing in a nursing facility | Patients who had a history of constipation, having received treatment for constipation at any time during the 4 wk preceding entry into the study |
A: Placebo B: Prucalopride 0.5 mg qd C: Prucalopride 1 mg qd D: Prucalopride 2 mg qd 4 wk |
A: 18 (F 13) B: 21 (F 18) C: 24 (F 17) D: 26 (F 17) Mean age (range) A: 85.4 (71-98) yr B: 84.4 (75-98) yr C: 82.6 (69-96) yr D: 81.7 (65-94) yr |
Serious AEs Discontinuation d/t AEs QTc prolongation 24 hr Holter monitoring | See |
| Müller-Lissner et al[ | Prucalopride vs Placebo | Multicenter, parallel-group, placebo-controlled Phase III trial | Chronic constipation patients aged > 65 yr | Two or fewer SCBMs per wk in the past 6 mo and one or more of the following for at least a quarter of the symptoms |
A: Placebo B: Prucalopride 1 mg qd C: Prucalopride 2 mg qd D: Prucalopride 4 mg qd 4 wk |
A: 72 (F 42) B: 76 (F 58) C: 75 (F 51) D: 80 (F 60) Mean age (range) A: 76.0 (65-94) yr B: 76.7 (65-92) yr C: 75.6 (64-91) yr D: 77.1 (65-95) yr |
Percentage of patients with ≥ 3 SCBM per wk SBMs/wk |
A 26.1% B 42.1% C 43.8% D 48.7% A 4.2 → 5.1B 4.5 → 6.9a C 4.1 → 6.0 D 4.3 → 6.2 |
| Ueno et al[ | Lubiprostone vs Placebo | Pooled analysis of elderly subjects in 3 RCTs | Chronic constipation patients aged ≥ 65 yr | Rome II criteria for functional constipation |
A: Lubiprostone 24 mg bid B: Placebo 4 wk |
A: 26 B: 31 Mean age not specified |
Additional SBMs/wk compared with baseline Stool consistency and straining AEs |
A: 4.6-5.4B:1.3-2.3 Consistency and straining improved in lubiprostone group See |
| Nakajima et al[ | Elobixibat vs Placebo | Post hoc analysis of randomized, placebo-controlled, phase 3 trials | Patients with severe constipation | ≤ 2 SBMs per wk and ≤ 3 Bristol Stool Form Scale score |
A: elobixibat 10 mg qd B: Placebo 2 wk |
A: 69 (elderly 6) B: 63 (elderly 5) | Additional SBMs/wk compared with placebo |
Patients < 65: 4.5 (3.3-5.8) Patients ≥ 65: 6.0 (1.8-10.2) |
| Menees et al[ | Plecanatide vs Placebo | Pooled analysis of 4 RCTs | Chronic constipation and IBS-C | Rome III criteria |
A: Placebo B: Plecanatide 3 mg qd C: Plecanatide 6 mg qd 12 wk |
A: 162 B: 150 C: 138 Mean age of all patients 70.0 (4.3) yr |
AEs SCBMs/wk SBMs/wk |
See A 1.56 (0.26) B 2.63 (0.27)b C 2.07 (0.29) A 1.90 (0.32) B 3.27 (0.33)b C 2.61 (0.36) |
aP < 0.05, bP < 0.01.
F, female; qd, once a day; bid, 2 times a day; AEs, adverse effects; QTc, corrected QT interval; SCBMs, spontaneous complete bowel movements; SBMs, spontaneous bowel movements; RCTs, randomized controlled trials; IBS-C, irritable bowel syndrome constipation type.
Adverse Effects of Laxatives From Randomized Controlled Trials
| RCTs | Comparison | Intervention | Duration | Adverse events | Drop out |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Intra-class comparisons | |||||
| Ewerth et al[ | Bulk vs Placebo |
A: Psyllium 6 g bid B: Placebo | 8 wk |
Less AEs during bulk laxative treatments Mild abdominal pain and flatulence during placebo | 10% (1/10) |
| Finlay[ | Bulk vs Placebo |
A: Bran 1.5-4.5 g qd B: Regular diet | 6 wk | One patient reported difficulty in swallowing bran | 14.3% (2/14) (one due to swallowing difficulty and the other due to refusal of bran) |
| Rajala et al[ | Bulk vs Placebo |
A: Yoghurt + bran 150 mL bid B: Yoghurt bid | 2 wk | No significant changes were observed in blood glucose, serum cholesterol or triglyceride, body weights or fecal pH values in either group | Not described |
| Cheskin et al[ | Bulk vs Placebo |
A: Psyllium 6 g qid B: Placebo | 4 wk | No difference between groups | 30.0% (3/10) (cannot tolerate the repeated perfused catheter for anorectal manometry) |
| Chokhavatia et al[ | Bulk vs Bulk |
A: Calcium polycarbophil 2 g qd B: Psyllium 9.5 g qd | 3 wk | Not described | 7.0% (3/42) (all unrelated to the study medication) |
| Wesselius-De Casparis et al[ | Osmotic vs Placebo |
A: Lactulose 15 mL qd B: Placebo | 3 wk | The only AEs sometimes observed was transient gas formation and intestinal bloating | Not described |
| Sanders[ | Osmotic vs Placebo |
A: Lactulose 30 mL qd B: Placebo | 12 wk |
No adverse clinical and laboratory effects in both groups Results of blood and urine laboratory tests were within normal limits | 10.6% (5/47) |
| Vanderdonckt et al[ | Osmotic vs Placebo |
A: Lactitol 20 g qd B: Placebo | 4 wk | All reported adverse effects were abdominal symptoms, such as bloating and flatulence, compatible with the administration of a non-absorbable sugar | 8.7% (4/46) |
| Dipalma et al[ | Osmotic vs Placebo |
A: PEG 3350 17 g qd B: Placebo | 6 mo | No treatment emergent safety differences betweenPEG and placebo over the course of the 6-mo study except for gastrointestinal complaints (PEG 39.7%, placebo 25%)a Most of these events were mild or moderate. There were no clinically significant laboratory changes | 0.7% (2/306) (randomization error, noncompliance) |
| Lederle et al[ | Osmotic vs Osmotic |
A: Lactulose 30-60 mL qd B: Sorbitol 30-60 mL qd | 4 wk | There were no significant differences between sorbitol and lactulose in any outcome measured except nausea, which increased with lactulosea | 3.2% (1/31 while receiving lactulose) |
| Seinelä et al[ | Osmotic vs Osmotic |
A: PEG 4000 without electrolyte 12 g qd B: PEG 4000 with electrolyte 12 g qd | 4 wk |
All AEs: 7 (23.3%) patients in the PEG without electrolyte vs 6 (18.8%) in the PEG with electrolyte group (NS) Serious AEs: 0 patients in PEG without electrolyte vs 3 (9.3%) in PEG with electrolyte group (hospitalization due to hypotension, congestive heart failure, and myocardial infarction) Significant difference in plasma sodium level: 138.8 mEq/L → 137.7 mEq/L in PEG without electrolyte vs 138.6 mEq/L → 138.9 mEq/L in PEG with electrolyte.a However, none were considered to be clinically significant and none led to intervention |
3.3% in PEG without electrolyte group (1/30, for personal reason) 6.3% in PEG with electrolyte group (2/32, 1 due to AE, 1 for personal reason) |
| Chassagne et al[ | Osmotic vs Osmotic |
A: PEG 4000 10-30 g qd B: Lactulose 10-30 g qd | 6 mo |
No clinically relevant or statistically significant changes in the proportion of patients with abnormal values between PEG 4000 and lactulose at Month 6 At least one AEs: 64 (50.4%) patients in lactulose vs 67 (56.8%) in PEG 4000 (NS) Serious AEs: 16 (12.6%) patients in lactulose vs 24 (20.3%) in PEG 4000 (NS) AEs that led to permanent discontinuation: 8 (6.3%) patients in lactulose vs 3 (2.5%) in PEG 4000 (NS) |
34.6% (44/127) in lactulose group 24.6% (29/118) in PEG 4000 group |
| Stern 1966, USA | Stimulant vs Placebo |
A: Prucara (162 mg prune concentrate and 162 mg cascarin) 2 tablets bid B: Placebo | 3 wk | Watery stool in 1 treated patient (4%, 1/25) | Not described |
| Hyland and Foran[ | Softener vs Placebo |
A: DSS 100 mg tid B: Placebo | 4 wk | Not described | 13.0% (6/46, 5 unrelated deaths, 1 patient could not tolerate placebo tablet) |
| Fain et al[ | Softener vs Softener |
A: DSS 100 mg qd B: DSS 100 mg bid C: DCS 240 mg qd | 3 wk |
No adverse effect was seen in 3 groups No laboratory abnormalities | 2.0% (1/47) |
| Inter-class comparisons | |||||
| Kinnunen and Salokannel[ | Bulk vs Osmotic |
A: Magnesiumhydroxide 25 mL qd B: Bulk laxative 8.7 g qd | 8 wk | Serum magnesium 2.92 mEq/L in a patient with impaired renal function and 2.74 mEq/L in a patient with normal creatinine but lowered creatinine clearance after the magnesium hydroxide treatment | 5.1% (3/59, 3 unable to swallow bulk laxative) |
| Kinnunen et al[ | Bulk + Stimulant vs Osmotic |
A: Agiolax 20 mL qd B: Lactulose 30 mL qd | 5 wk | No adverse effects and changed in laboratory parameters in both treatments | 20.0% (6/30) (1 myocardial infarction, 1 fatal pneumonia in Agiolax group, 1 weakening of general condition and 1 ineffectiveness of medication in lactulose group, 2 referrals to other hospitals) |
| Passmore et al[ | Bulk+Stimulant vs Osmotic |
A: Agiolax 10 mL qd B: Lactulose 15 mL bid | 2 wk | 24 (31.2%) with Agiolax group and 21 (27.3%) with lactulose group (NS). Flatulence, urgency, and cramps were the most common AEs | 9.4% (8/85) (3 withdrawn after first treatment period, 3 unacceptable compliance, 1 deteriorating health, and 1 incomplete data) |
| Pers and Pers[ | Bulk + Stimulant vs Bulk + Stimulant |
A: Agiolax 1 sachet qd (15 mg senna) B: Lunelax 1 sachet qd (25 mg senna) | 2 wk | No AEs were seen with either of the preparations | 5.0% (1/20) (severe diarrhea not related with the medication) |
| Novel medications | |||||
| Camilleri et al[ | Prucalopride vs Placebo |
A: Placebo B: Prucalopride 0.5 mg qd C: Prucalopride 1 mg qd D: Prucalopride 2 mg qd | 4 wk |
Serious AEs: A: 0 B: 2 (moderate diarrhea and urinary tract infection) C: 0 D: 0 Discontinuation due to AEs: A 0 B 3 (nonsustained ventricular tachycardia, 2 cases as above) C 1 (death d/t lobar pneumonia) D 0 QTc prolongation: A 1 B 1 C 1 D 0 | A 22.2% (4/18, 2 other reason, 2 withdrawal of consent) B 14.3% (3/21, 3 due to AEs) C 12.5% (3/24, 1 due to AEs, 1 withdrawal of consent, 1 noncompliance) D 7.7% (2/26, 1 other reason, 1 withdrawal of consent) |
| Müller-Lissner et al[ | Prucalopride vs Placebo |
A: Placebo B: Prucalopride 1 mg qd C: Prucalopride 2 mg qd D: Prucalopride 4 mg qd | 4 wk |
Total AEs: A 44.4% B 48.7% C 38.7% D 47.5% Severe AEs: A 1 (“arrythmia” and “myocardial infarction” considered not related to the medication) B 1 (“mild drug abuse”) C 0 D 1 (fracture of the left forearm) Discontinuation due to AEs: A 2.9% (2/70) B 2.6% (2/76) C 5.3% (4/75) D 8.8% (7/79) | A 10.0% (7/70) B 9.2% (7/76) C 10.7% (8/75) D 13.9% (11/79) |
| Ueno et al[ | Lubiprostone vs Placebo |
A: Lubiprostone 24 mcg bid B: Placebo | 4 wk |
AE incidence rates A 12 (46.2%) B 19 (61.3%) (NS) | Not identified |
| Nakajima et al[ | Elobixibat vs Placebo |
A: Elobixibat 10 mg qd B: Placebo | 52 wk |
Abdominal pain Patients < 65 yr: 81 (26%) Patients ≥ 65 yr: 1 (4%) Diarrhea Patients < 65 yr: 47 (15%) Patients ≥ 65 yr: 3 (12%) (NS) | Not identified |
| Menees et al[ | Plecanatide vs Placebo |
A: Placebo B: Plecanatide 3 mg qd C: Plecanatide 6 mg qd | 12 wk |
Proportions of AEs: A 24.7%, B 35.3%, C 31.9% Proportions of Serious AEs: A 1.9%, B 2.0%, C 1.4% | A 4.3%, B 6.7%, C 7.3% |
aP < 0.05.
bid, 2 times a day; qd, once a day; AEs, adverse effects; RCTs, randomized controlled trials; PEG, polyethylene glycol; mEq/L, milliequivalent per liter; QTc, corrected QT interval.
Figure 2Forest plot showing risk ratio of studies comparing osmotic laxatives and placebo in the relief of constipation. M-H, Mantel-Haenszel; PEG, polyethylene glycol.
Figure 3Forest plot showing risk ratio of studies comparing prucalopride and placebo in the relief of constipation. M-H, Mantel-Haenszel.