| Literature DB >> 35838226 |
Maria Heliste1, Ville Pettilä1, David Berger2, Stephan M Jakob2, Erika Wilkman1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Critical illness may lead to activation of the sympathetic system. The sympathetic stimulation may be further increased by exogenous catecholamines, such as vasopressors and inotropes. Excessive adrenergic stress has been associated with organ dysfunction and higher mortality. β-Blockers may reduce the adrenergic burden, but they may also compromise perfusion to vital organs thus worsening organ dysfunction. To assess the effect of treatment with β-blockers in critically ill adults, we conducted a systematic review and meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials.Entities:
Keywords: beta-blockers; circulatory shock; critically ill; intensive care; major burns; meta-analysis; mortality; sepsis; systematic review; trauma
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35838226 PMCID: PMC9291706 DOI: 10.1080/07853890.2022.2098376
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ann Med ISSN: 0785-3890 Impact factor: 5.348
Figure 1.PRISMA flow diagram of the study selection process.
Figure 2.Risk of bias summary.
Aims of included trials.
| Author & year [ref.] | Aim of study |
|---|---|
| Ali, A. et al. 2015 [ | To investigate effects of propranolol on the cardiovascular system, perioperative hemodynamics, and wound healing by decreasing baseline HR by 20%. |
| Arar, C. et al. 2007 [ | To compare the effects of esmolol and Mg on hemodynamic response in the pre-extubation period in the ICU following CABG surgery. |
| Balser, J. R. et al. 1998 [ | To evaluate wheather |
| Bible, L. E. et al. 2014 [ | To investigate whether propranolol would prevent bone marrow dysfunction in humans following severe injury when administered after the injury. |
| Brunner, M. et al. 2000 [ | To investigate the safety and efficacy of oral carvedilol in unstable angina in addition to standardised treatment. |
| Cheema, S. A. et al. 2020 [ | To compare the mean duration of wound healing and attenuation of muscle wasting in adult burn patients with propranolol and control group. |
| Connolly, S. J. et al. 2003 [ | Whether treatment with p.o. metoprolol immediately after heart surgery reduces hospital length of stay and costs. |
| De Hert, S. G. et al. 1988 [ | To investigate the influence of labetalol on arterial blood gas data, pulmonary hemodynamics and pulmonary shunting in patients with neurosurgical treatment for traumatic injury. |
| Er, F. et al. 2016 [ | To evaluate the role of esmolol-induced tight sympathetic control in STEMI patients with successful PCI. |
| Guillory, A. N. et al. 2017 [ | To determine the appropriate propranolol kinetics and dosing strategy for reducing HR in severely burned adults receiving propranolol every 6 h, every 8 h, and once daily. |
| Hanada, K. et al. 2012 [ | To examine the efficacy and safety of early i.v. administration of landiolol in patients with AMI undergoing primary PCI. |
| Kakihana, Y. et al. 2020 [ | To investigate the effects of landiolol on HR, mortality, and safety in patients with sepsis related tachyarrhythmias, incl. FA, atrial flutter, and sinus tachycardia, compared with patients who received conventional therapy. |
| Khalili, H. et al. 2020 [ | To examine the effects of |
| Morelli, A. et al. 2013 [ | To investigate the effects of the short-acting |
| Sakaguchi, M. et al. 2012 [ | To examine the effects of landiolol hydrochloride on prevention of AF and on hemodynamics in the acute postoperative phase after heart valve surgery. |
| Wang, Z. et al. 2015 [ | To assess the effects of esmolol combined with milrinone in patients with severe sepsis. |
Abbreviations: ref.: reference number; HR: heart rate; Mg: magnesium; ICU: intensive care unit: CABG: coronary artery bypass graft; SVT: supraventricular tachycardia; FA: atrial fibrillation; STEMI: ST-elevation myocardial infarction; PCI: percutaneous coronary intervention; i.v.: intravenous; AMI: acute myocardial infarction; TBI: traumatic brain injury.
Intervention, comparator and reported outcomes of included trials.
| Author, year (ref.) | Name of beta-blocker | Control/comparator | Nr. of patients; total (beta-blocker/controls) | Review outcomes reported and included in meta-analysis | Review outcomes reported * |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ali, A. et al. 2015 [ | Propranolol | Standard care | 69 (35/34) | Mortality (no timepoint) | HR, vasopressor load, lactate |
| Arar, C. et al. 2007 [ | Esmolol | (1) Magnesium (2) placebo (saline) | 120 (40/40/40) | __ | HR, MAP |
| Balser, J. R. et al. 1998 [ | Esmolol | Diltiazem | 63 (34/30*) | Mortality (in-hospital) | HR, MAP, vasopressor load |
| Bible, L. E. et al. 2014 [ | Propranolol | Standard care | 45 (25/20) | Mortality (30-d) | Organ dysfunction (ventilator days), HR, BP/MAP, lactate |
| Brunner, M. et al. 2000 [ | Carvedilol | Placebo; no description of placebo or administration | 116 (59/57) | Mortality (48 h), HR | BP (no MAP), TnT |
| Cheema, S. A. et al. 2020 [ | Propranolol | Standard care | 70 (35/35) | __ | HR |
| Connolly, S. J. et al. 2003 [ | Metoprolol | Placebo; no description of placebo or administration | 1000 (500/500) | Mortality (in-hospital) | Mechanical ventilation, HR |
| De Hert, S. G. et al. 1988 [ | Labetalol | Placebo; isotonic physiologic solution | 30 (15/15) | __ | HR, MAP |
| Er, F. et al. 2016 [ | Esmolol | NaCl 0.9 % | 101 (50/51) | Mortality (6 months), HR | Quality of life, LV EF, BNP, TnT |
| Guillory, A. N. Et al. 2017 [ | Propranolol | Placebo; no description of placebo or administration | 26 (16/10) | __ | HR, BP (no MAP) |
| Hanada, K. et al. 2012 [ | Landiolol | Standard care | 96 (47/49) | Mortality (in-hospital, 6 months) | HR, BP (no MAP), LV EF, BNP |
| Kakihana, Y. et al. 2020 [ | Landiolol | Standard care | 151 (76/75) | Mortality (28 d), HR, MAP, vasopressor load | Organ dysfunction (kidney function, ventilator-free days); LV EF, lactate, BNP, TnI |
| Khalili, H. et al. 2020 [ | Propranolol | Standard care | 219 (99/120)** | Mortality (in-hospital) | HR, MAP |
| Morelli, A. et al. 2013 [ | Esmolol | Standard care | 154 (77/77) | Mortality (28-d) | Organ dysfunction (kidneys, liver, heart), HR, MAP, vasopressor load, TnT, lactate |
| Sakaguchi, M. Et al. 2012 [ | Landiolol | Standard care | 60 (30/30) | __ | HR, BP (no MAP), vasopressor load |
| Wang, Z. et al. 2015 [ | Esmolol | (1) Milrinone (2) standard care | 90 (30/30/30) | Mortality (28-d), HR, MAP, vasopressor load | Organ dysfunction (kidney, liver), lactate, BNP, TnI, IL-6/-10 |
Explanations: *Review outcomes assessed in original trials but not reported as mean (SD)/reported partly/data not available and could not be included in the quantitative meta-analysis.
– = not reported.
Abbreviations: ref.: reference number; HR: heart rate; MAP: mean arterial pressure; BP: blood pressure; TnT/TnI: troponin T/I; NaCl: natrium chloride; LVEF: left ventricular ejection fraction; BNP: brain natriuretic peptide; IL-6/-10 : interleukin-6/-10.
Figure 3.Forest plot of mortality, all.
GRADE summary of findings table.
| Certainty assessment | Summary of findings | ||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Participants | Risk of bias | Inconsistency | Indirectness | Imprecision | Publication bias | Overall certainty of evidence | Study event rates (%) | Relative effect | Anticipated absolute effects | ||
| With control | With Beta-blocker | Risk with control | Risk difference with Beta-blocker | ||||||||
| Mortality (all) | |||||||||||
| 2103 (11 RCTs) | Not seriousa | Not serious | Not serious | Not serious | None | ⨁⨁⨁⨁ | 157/1072 (14.6%) | 88/1031 (8.5%) | RR 0.65 | 146 per 1 000 | 51 fewer per 1 000 |
| Short-term mortality (<14 days) | |||||||||||
| 1467 | Not serious | Seriousb | Not serious | Not serious | None | ⨁⨁⨁◯ | 37/740 (5.0%) | 29/727 (4.0%) | RR 0.85 | 50 per 1 000 | 8 fewer per 1 000 |
| Long-term mortality (>14 days) | |||||||||||
| 636 | Not serious | Not serious | Not serious | Not serious | None | ⨁⨁⨁⨁ | 120/332 (36.1%) | 59/304 (19.4%) | RR 0.60 | 361 per 1 000 | 145 fewer per 1 000 |
| Heart rate 24 h (beats/min) | |||||||||||
| 426 | Not serious | Seriousc | Not serious | Not serious | None | ⨁⨁⨁◯ |
| MD 11.96 lower | |||
| MAP 48 h (mmHg) | |||||||||||
| 210 | Not serious | Not serious | Not serious | Not serious | None | ⨁⨁⨁⨁ |
| MD 1.66 higher | |||
| MAP 72 h (mmHg) | |||||||||||
| 210 | Not serious | Not serious | Not serious | Not serious | None | ⨁⨁⨁⨁ |
| MD 2.43 lower | |||
| Vasopressor load 48 h (µkg/kg/min) | |||||||||||
| 210 | Not serious | Not serious | Not serious | Not serious | None | ⨁⨁⨁⨁ |
| MD 0.02 higher | |||
| Vasopressor load 72 h (µkg/kg/min) | |||||||||||
| 210 | Not serious | Not serious | Not serious | Not serious | None | ⨁⨁⨁⨁ |
| MD 0 | |||
CI: confidence interval; MD: mean difference; RR: risk ratio.
Explanations: aDespite most trials were considered having high overall-risk of bias, this outcome assessment was considered robust. bHeterogeneity: Tau2 = 0.16; Chi2 = 4.02, df = 2 (p = .13); I2 = 50%; cHeterogeneity: Tau2 = 73.81; Chi2 = 32.69, df = 3 (p < .00001); I2 = 91%.
Figure 4.Forest plot of short-term mortality.
Figure 5.Forest plot of long-term mortality.
Figure 6.Forest plot of HR 24 h.
Figure 7.Forest plot of MAP 48 h.
Figure 8.Forest plot of MAP 72 h.
Figure 9.Forest plot of vasopressor load 48 h.
Figure 10.Forest plot of vasopressor load 72 h.
Characteristics of included studies.
| Author, year [ref.] | Country | Blinding, nr. of study centres | Population [type of critical illness] | Nr. of patients; total [beta-blocker/controls] | Follow-up period |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ali, A. et al. 2015 [ | USA | Non-blinded, single-centre | Severe burns [burns coverin | 69 (35/34) | NR |
| Arar, C. et al. 2007 [ | Turkey | Double-blind, single-centre | Cardiac surgery | 120 (40/40/40) | Before extubation to 1 min after extubation in the ICU |
| Balser, J. R. et al. 1998 [ | USA | Non-blinded, single-centre | Major non-cardiac surgery | 63 (34/30*) | 12 h |
| Bible, L. E. et al. 2014 [ | USA | Non-blinded, single-centre | Severe trauma | 45 (25/20) | 30 d or until discharge from the hospital, whichever occurred first |
| Brunner, M. et al. 2000 [ | Germany | Double-blind, multicenter | Unstable angina pectoris | 116 (59/57) | 48 h |
| Cheema, S. A. et al. 2020 [ | Pakistan | Non-blinded, single-centre | Burns with 20–40% of TBSA | 70 (35/35) | NR |
| Connolly, S. J. et al. 2003 [ | Canada | Double-blind, single-centre | Heart surgery | 1000 (500/500) | 14 days or until hospital discharge |
| De Hert, S. G. et al. 1988 [ | Belgium | Double-blind, single-centre | Postop treatment after neurosugical interventions for traumatic injury | 30 (15/15) | 30 min |
| Er, F. et al. 2016 [ | Germany | Single-blind, single-centre | STEMI + successful PCI | 101 (50/51) | 6 months |
| Guillory, A. N. Et al. 2017 [ | USA | Non-blinded, single-centre | Severe burns | 26 (16/10) | NR |
| Hanada, K. et al. 2012 [ | Japan | Non-blinded, single-centre | AMI patients undergoing primary PCI | 96 (47/49) | 24 h = acute phas |
| Kakihana, Y. et al. 2020 [ | Japan | Non-blinded, multicenter | Sepsis [+tachyarrhythmia] | 151 (76/75) | 28 days |
| Khalili, H. et al. 2020 [ | USA | Non-blinded, single-centre | Traumatic brain injury | 219 (99/120)** | 8 months; during hospital stay + at 6 months |
| Morelli, A. et al. 2013 [ | Italy | Single-centre, open-label | Septic shock | 154 (77/77) | 28 d |
| Sakaguchi, M. Et al. 2012 [ | Japan | Non-blinded, single centre | Cardiac surgery; AF after valve surgery | 60 (30/30) | 72 h |
| Wang, Z. et al. 2015 [ | China | Non-blinded, single centre | Severe sepsis | 90 (30/30/30) | 28 d |
Explanations:
*1 Subject entered the trial twice, randomized to diltiazem group on both times.
**After randomization formed subgroup of isolated severe TBI without other injuries in which number of patients who received propral: 68 = 44%, and control 86 = 56%
Abbreviations: Ref.: reference number; NR: not reported; TBSA: total body surface area; ICU: intensive care unit; STEMI: ST-elevation myocardial infarction; PCI: percutaneous coronary intervention; AMI: acute myocardial infarction; AF: atrial fibrillation.