| Literature DB >> 35954977 |
Rosalie de Bruin1, Sarah L van Dalen1, Shamaya J Franx1, Viraraghavan V Ramaswamy2, Sinno H P Simons3, Robert B Flint3,4, Gerbrich E van den Bosch3.
Abstract
Beta-blockers are often used during pregnancy to treat cardiovascular diseases. The described neonatal side effects of maternal beta-blocker use are hypoglycemia and bradycardia, but the evidence base for these is yet to be evaluated comprehensively. Hence, this systematic review and meta-analysis was performed to evaluate the potential increased risk for hypoglycemia and bradycardia in neonates exposed to beta-blockers in utero or during lactation. A systematic search of English-language human studies was conducted until 21 April 2021. Both observational studies and randomized controlled trials investigating hypoglycemia and/or bradycardia in neonates following beta-blocker exposure during pregnancy and lactation were included. All articles were screened by two authors independently and eligible studies were included. Pair-wise and proportion-based meta-analysis was conducted and the certainty of evidence (CoE) was performed by standard methodologies. Of the 1.043 screened articles, 55 were included in this systematic review. Our meta-analysis showed a probable risk of hypoglycemia (CoE-Moderate) and possible risk of bradycardia (CoE-Low) in neonates upon fetal beta-blocker exposure. Therefore, we suggest the monitoring of glucose levels in exposed neonates until 24 h after birth. Due to the limited clinical implication, monitoring of the heart rate could be considered for 24 h. We call for future studies to substantiate our findings.Entities:
Keywords: beta-blockers; bradycardia; hypoglycemia; lactation; neonate; pregnancy
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35954977 PMCID: PMC9368631 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph19159616
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 4.614
Statements to communicate the findings of the systematic review.
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Figure 1Overview literature search according the PRISMA guidelines.
Overview of 40 included studies.
| Source | Study Group | Number of Patients | Country | Study Design | Objective | Treatment Indication | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nulliparous patients undergoing term induction of labor with a single, non-anomalous gestation received propranolol or placebo | United States | RCT | To determine whether the addition of a single dose of propranolol to induce labor in nulliparous women would decrease total time to vaginal delivery | Induction of labor | Hypoglycemia | ||
| Neonates of hypertensive women treated with metoprolol and/or bisoprolol after the first trimester, but not with methyldopa at any time during pregnancy | Germany | Cohort study | To evaluate the effects of beta blockers during the second and third trimester on fetal growth, length of gestation and postnatal symptoms in exposed infants | Chronic or pregnancy-induced hypertension | Hypoglycemia and bradycardia | ||
| All the infants born ≥34 weeks with mothers using beta blockers prenatally compared to mothers with diabetes, both beta-blockers and diabetes or without pregnancy conditions | United States | Cohort study | To evaluate whether pregnancy glycated hemoglobin (HbA1c) levels of ≤6% and maternal race impacts neonatal hypoglycemia and birthweight, and whether diabetes and beta blocker use during pregnancy additively impacts neonatal outcomes | Not described in article | Hypoglycemia | ||
| Infants born to mothers who were treated with beta-blockers during pregnancy and until delivery | Israel | Case–control | To evaluate infants exposed to intrauterine beta blockers in order to estimate the need of postnatal monitoring | Cardiac disease (arrhythmia, rheumatic heart disease and cardiomyopathy), chronic hypertension, migraine, PIH (pregnancy induced hypertension) and pre-eclampsia | Hypoglycemia and bradycardia | ||
| Pregnant woman older than 18 years and gestational age of at least 28 weeks received labetalol, nifedipine or methyldopa | India | RCT | To compare the efficacy and safety of oral labetalol, nifedipine retard and methyldopa for the management of severe hypertension in pregnancy | Hypertension in pregnancy | Hypoglycemia and bradycardia | ||
| Preterm neonates prenatally exposed to labetalol because of maternal HDP | Belgium | Case–control | To investigate labetalol-induced effects on neonatal hemodynamics and cerebral oxygenation in the first 24 h after birth | Hypertensive disorders in pregnancy (HDP) | Bradycardia | ||
| Completed pregnancies linked to liveborn infants | United States | Cohort study | To define the risks of neonatal | Pre-existing or gestational hypertension, pre-eclampsia, migraine, cardiac arrhythmia, ischemic heart disease, anxiety and congestive heart failure | Hypoglycemia and bradycardia | ||
| Women with severe hypertension in pregnancy who received labetalol or hydralazine | India | RCT | To evaluate the efficacy and safety of intravenous labetalol and intravenous hydralazine in managing hypertensive emergency in pregnancy | Hypertension in pregnancy | Hypoglycemia | ||
| Infants from mothers suffering from severe preeclampsia and/or HELLP treated with labetalol | The Netherlands | Case–control | Analysis of possible association between intrauterine labetalol exposure and side effects | Preeclampsia and/or HELLP-syndrome | Hypoglycemia and bradycardia | ||
| Pregnant patients newly diagnosed with systolic blood pressure of ≥140 mmHg and a diastolic blood pressure of ≥90 mmHg and gestational age between 20–40 weeks of pregnancy received labetalol or methyldopa | India | RCT | (1) To evaluate the effect of labetalol versus methyldopa on maternal outcomes in the treatment of new onset hypertension during pregnancy | Pregnancy induced hypertension | Hypoglycemia and bradycardia | ||
| Women older than 15 years delivering an infant, who had been continuously enrolled with prescription drug coverage for ≥1 year prior to delivery | United States | Cohort study | To study risks for perinatal complications and congenital defects among infants exposed to beta blockers in utero | Not described in article | Hypoglycemia | ||
| Women with severe hypertension in pregnancy treated with labetalol or hydralazine | Panama | RCT | To compare the safety and efficacy of intravenous labetalol and intravenous hydralazine for acutely lowering blood pressure in pregnancy | Severe preeclampsia, gestational hypertension, superimposed preeclampsia, chronic hypertension, eclampsia and severe preeclampsia with HELLP | Hypoglycemia and bradycardia | ||
| Newborns of mothers treated with atenolol, isradipine or a low sodium diet during pregnancy | Brazil | RCT | To evaluate the effect of isradipine on the evolution of glycemia levels in newborns of pregnant women who have arterial hypertension, comparing it to the use of atenolol and situations where the blood pressure control was done without using antihypertensive medications | Specific hypertensive disease of pregnancy (SHDP) or chronic arterial hypertension and superimposed SHDP | Hypoglycemia | ||
| Woman with moderate pregnancy-induced hypertension | Turkey | RCT | To compare the effect of propranolol/hydralazine to pindolol/hydralazine combination therapy with hydralazine monotherapy and to evaluate the clinical effects on the mother and on the fetus | Moderate pregnancy-induced hypertension | Hypoglycemia | ||
| Neonates born to mothers suffering from pregnancy-induced hypertension (PIH) and receiving labetalol compared to children of mothers treated with drugs other than labetalol for their PIH | India | Case–control | To assess the incidence of birth asphyxia, intrauterine growth retardation and hypoglycemia in the neonates of mothers suffering from pregnancy induced hypertension treated with labetalol | Pregnancy induced hypertension | Hypoglycemia and bradycardia | ||
| Women presenting with a diastolic blood pressure of 85–90 mmHg before the 35th week of pregnancy treated with pindolol or placebo | Israel | RCT | To investigate the benefits of early treatment of hypertension of pregnancy with pindolol and to compare the effects of initiating treatment at a DBP of 85–99 mmHg as opposed to starting treatment when DBP is ≥100 mmHg. The study examined the effects of treatment in incidence of maternal and fetal complications. | A diastolic blood pressure of 85–90 mmHg before the 35th week of pregnancy | Hypoglycemia and bradycardia | ||
| Patients with mild to moderate, non-proteinuric pregnancy-induced hypertension treated with labetalol or placebo | England | RCT | The fetal outcome of labetalol versus placebo in pregnancy-induced hypertension | Pregnancy induced hypertension: a blood pressure of 140–160 mmHg systolic and 90–105 mmHg diastolic after 15 min rest on two occasions separated by 24 h | Hypoglycemia and bradycardia | ||
| Woman with pre-eclampsia who were scheduled to undergo caesarean section under general anesthesia receiving labetalol pretreatmemt or no antihypertensive therapy before induction of anesthesia | United States | RCT | To study the effectiveness of labetalol in attenuating the hypertensive and tachycardiac responses associated with laryngoscopy and endotracheal intubation in pre-eclamptic women undergoing general anesthesia for caesarean section | Pre-eclampsia (diastolic blood pressure 96 to 120 mmHg and proteinuria) in combination with caesarean section | Hypoglycemia and bradycardia | ||
| Primigravida’s with severe hypertension in pregnancy at 32 weeks’ gestation or more receiving labetalol or dihydrallazine | South Africa | RCT | To compare the efficacy of dihydralazine with labetalol when administered as intravenous infusions to primigravida’s with severe hypertension in pregnancy at 32 weeks’ gestation or more | Severe hypertension in pregnancy (a diastolic blood pressure of 110 mmHg or more (Korotkoff phase IV sound), which had not settled after 2 h bed rest and sedation with phenobarbitone (sodium gardenal 200 mg intramuscularly)) | Hypoglycemia | ||
| Pregnant women with hypertension during pregnancy or in the puerperium receiving labetalol or hydralazine | United States | RCT | To compare the safety and efficacy of intravenous labetalol and intravenous hydralazine hydrochloride for acutely lowering blood pressure in the pregnant or recently postpartum patient | Pre-eclampsia and chronic hypertension with or without superimposed pre-eclampsia | Hypoglycemia and bradycardia | ||
| Hypertensive mothers | France | Case series | To evaluate the possible risk of exposure to beta blockers of newborn infants breast-fed by mothers being treated with acebutolol | Hypertension in pregnancy | Bradycardia | ||
| Infants born to women with hypertensive disease of pregnancy who had received labetalol for at least 7 days before delivery although some had begun treatment at 16 weeks gestation | England | Case–control | To examine a number of aspects of sympathetic function in infants born to labetalol-treated mothers compared with untreated controls to see if there were any clinically important effects of combined alfa and beta blockade | Hypertensive disease of pregnancy | Hypoglycemia and bradycardia | ||
| Women with mild and moderate hypertension in pregnancy treated with metoprolol and hydralazine vs. control | Sweden | RCT | To assess whether treatment with metoprolol, a beta-1 selective adrenoceptor blocking agent, in combination with hydralazine is of benefit for the mother and/or the fetus as compared with non-pharmacological treatment, in mild to moderate hypertension of pregnancy | A diastolic blood pressure of at least 90 mmHg on two or more occasions during pregnancy | Hypoglycemia and bradycardia | ||
| Women who developed hypertension in the last trimester of pregnancy received Atenolol or placebo | Scotland | RCT | To describe the findings of pediatric follow up to 1 year of age after the use of atenolol in pregnancy-associated hypertension | Pregnancy-associated hypertension | Bradycardia | ||
| Women with mild to moderate hypertension | England | Case–control | To compare acebutolol with methyldopa in hypertensive pregnancy | A blood pressure of 130/90 mmHg or above, a systolic pressure of 135 mmHg or above or a diastolic pressure of 85 mmHg or above | Hypoglycemia and bradycardia | ||
| Women with mild to moderate pregnancy-associated hypertension who were also initially managed conventionally by bed rest received atenolol or placebo | Scotland | RCT | To examine the efficacy and safety of atenolol in the treatment of pregnancy-associated hypertension | Pregnancy-associated hypertension: a blood-pressure between 140 and 170 mmHg systolic or between 90 and 110 mmHg diastolic (after 10 mins’ rest supine or after 5 mins’ standing) on two occasions separated by 24 h | Hypoglycemia and bradycardia | ||
| Hypertensive pregnancies | Sweden | Cohort study | To determine the effects of atenolol and metoprolol on maternal blood pressure and on the fetus and new-born | Chronic or pregnancy-related hypertension | Hypoglycemia | ||
| Pregnant women under treatment with atenolol for hypertension (during pregnancy or in the peripartum) | Sweden | Case series | To investigate atenolol’s ability to cross the human placental barrier and to study the excretion of atenolol in breast milk. | Hypertension in pregnancy | Bradycardia | ||
| Pregnancy-associated hypertension treated with propranolol or methyldopa | Australia | RCT | To compare propranolol with methyldopa in hypertensive pregnancy | A blood pressure of 140/90 or above, on two consecutive readings at least twenty-four hours apart. | Hypoglycemia and bradycardia | ||
| High-risk pregnancies with hypertension using beta blockers | France | Case series | To investigate the outcome of beta blocker use in high-risk pregnancies | Hypertension in pregnancy | Hypoglycemia | ||
| Children born from hypertensive pregnant women treated with acebutolol | France | Case series | To determine the pharmacokinetics of acebutolol in the mother, as well as its placental transfer, and the pharmacokinetics in the fetus | Chronic or pregnancy-associated hypertension, after failure of strict bed rest and methyldopa with or without hydralazine | Bradycardia | ||
| Infants of women using atenolol for management of essential hypertension in pregnancy | Scotland | Case series | To report the experience of using atenolol for several weeks during pregnancy in the management of essential hypertension | Systolic blood pressure exceeding 140 mmHg or diastolic pressure exceeding 90 mmHg on two separate occasions at least one day apart | Hypoglycemia and bradycardia | ||
| Pregnant women with hypertension treated with metoprolol combined with thiazide or hydralazine compared with women treated with hydralazine and a thiazide | Sweden | Case–control | To report further experiences of using metoprolol in hypertension of pregnancy. (In addition to a previous study) | Pregnancy-induced hypertension, pre-existing hypertension, eclampsia and hypertension with moderate/marked proteinuria | Hypoglycemia and bradycardia | ||
| Women with severe hypertension in pregnancy treated with labetalol or dihydralazine | South Africa | RCT | To compare the effect of labetalol and dihydralazine in increasing doses in woman with severe hypertension in pregnancy | Severe hypertension and imminent eclampsia or eclampsia | Bradycardia | ||
| Infants born to mothers who received acebutolol or methyldopa during pregnancy | France | Case–control | To evaluate any deleterious effect of the beta-adrenergic-blocking agent in newborn infants. | If the diastolic blood pressure exceeded 90 mm Hg on two occasions at least 24 h apart during pregnancy | Hypoglycemia and bradycardia | ||
| Infants of mothers treated with propranolol and hydralazine because of longstanding hypertension during pregnancy | Israel | Case series | To assess the efficiency of a combination of hydralazine and propranolol in the management of pregnant patients with essential hypertension | Essential hypertension | Hypoglycemia | ||
| Hypertensive pregnant women receiving sotalol | Northern Ireland | Case series | To study the effects and distribution of sotalol by administering it as sole therapy to a group of chronically hypertensive pregnant women. | Chronic or pregnancy-induced hypertension | Hypoglycemia and bradycardia | ||
| Pregnant women with moderately severe hypertension treated with oxprenolol or methyldopa | Australia | RCT | To examine the effects of antihypertensive treatment more | Moderately severe hypertension in pregnancy | Hypoglycemia | ||
| Infants from mothers who used propranolol chronically during pregnancy | United States | Case series | To examine maternal, fetal and neonatal complications of propranolol therapy in pregnancy | Thyrotoxicosis, hypertension, Barlow syndrome with arrhythmia, Lown-Ganong-Levine syndrome and supraventricular/paroxysmal atrial tachycardia | Hypoglycemia and bradycardia | ||
| Infants from mothers treated with propranolol during pregnancy | Israel | Case series | To report the experience of 25 women who received propranolol orally for the treatment of hypertension during 26 pregnancies with 22 liveborn infants | Essential hypertension, recurrent hypertension of pregnancy, pre-eclampsia and unilateral chronic pyelonephritis | Hypoglycemia |
Abbreviations: HDP: Hypertensive Disorders in Pregnancy, HELLP: Hemolysis, Elevated Liver enzymes and Low Platelets, RCT: Randomized Controlled Trial.
Type and dosage of beta blocker.
| Article | Acebutolol | Atenolol | Bisoprolol | Carvedilol | Labetalol | Metoprolol | Nadolol | Oxprenolol | Pindolol | Propranolol | Sotalol |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2 mg | |||||||||||
| 1.25–10 mg/day | 12–400 mg/day | ||||||||||
| X | X | X | |||||||||
| 200 mg/day (max. 600 mg/day) | |||||||||||
| X | |||||||||||
| X | X | X | X | X | X | X | X | X | X | ||
| X | |||||||||||
| X | |||||||||||
| 100–300 mg three times per day | |||||||||||
| Max. 300 mg | |||||||||||
| 50 mg two times per day | |||||||||||
| 5–15 mg | 40–120 mg | ||||||||||
| X | |||||||||||
| 5–10 mg two or three times per day | |||||||||||
| 100–200 mg three times per day | |||||||||||
| X | |||||||||||
| 200 mg | |||||||||||
| 20–80 mg | |||||||||||
| 200–1200 mg per day | |||||||||||
| 100–300 mg three times per day | |||||||||||
| 50 mg two times per day (200 mg maximum per day) | |||||||||||
| Max. 200 mg per day | |||||||||||
| 300–600 mg per day | |||||||||||
| 100 mg per day | |||||||||||
| 50–200 mg per day | X | ||||||||||
| X | |||||||||||
| 30–160 mg per day | |||||||||||
| 200 mg | 100 mg | 5 mg | |||||||||
| 200–800 mg per day | |||||||||||
| 100 or 200 mg per day | |||||||||||
| 100–400 mg | |||||||||||
| 200 mg | |||||||||||
| 200–800 mg/day | |||||||||||
| 30–240 mg per day | |||||||||||
| 200 mg per day | |||||||||||
| X | |||||||||||
| 10–80 mg per day | |||||||||||
| 40–120 mg per day |
X = type of beta-blocker used in this study (in case the exact dosage is not provided). 1 This article did not mention the type of beta blocker that was used. 2 This article did not mention anything on the dose of the beta-blockers used. 3 A 20 mg intravenous bolus dose followed by 40 mg if not effective within 10 min, then 80 mg every 10 min until BP was lower than 150/100 mm Hg or until a maximum total dose of 220 mg was reached [36]. 4 A 20 mg bolus intravenous followed by a continuous infusion of 20 mg/h. When not effective within 20 min, this was followed by a 40 mg bolus and the continuous infusion was increased to 40 mg/h. When still not effective within 20 min an extra 80 mg bolus was followed by a continuous infusion that was increased up to 80 mg/h. Maximal cumulative dose was limited to 220 mg/h [37]. 5 Davis RL et al. [39] did not mention the types of beta-blockers which they included in their study. 6 A 20 mg intravenous bolus dose was followed by 40 mg if not effective within 20 min, followed by 80 mg every 20 min up to a maximum dose of 300 mg (five doses) [40]. 7 Before induction of anesthesia, 20 mg of labetalol was administered intravenously as a bolus followed by 10 mg increments every 2 min until the diastolic blood pressure was below 100 mmHg or the mean arterial pressure fell by 20% from baseline values [28]. 8 The dosage of the drug was altered as clinically indicated to maintain a sitting diastolic BP at or below 80 mm Hg [63].
Risk of bias in 18 randomized controlled trials.
| Source | Domain 1. Risk of Bias from the Randomization Process | Domain 2. Risk of Bias Due to Deviations from the Intended Interventions | Domain 3. Missing Outcome Data | Domain 4. Risk of Bias in Measurement of the Outcome | Domain 5. Risk of Bias in selection of the Reported Result | Overall Risk of Bias Judgement |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Some concerns | Low | Low | Low | Some concerns | High risk | |
| Low | Low | Low | Low | Low | Low | |
| Some concerns | Low | Low | Low | Some concerns | High risk | |
| Some concerns | Some concerns | Low | Low | Some concerns | High risk | |
| Low | Some concerns | Low | Low | Low | Some concerns | |
| Some concerns | Some concerns | Low | Low | Some concerns | High risk | |
| Some concerns | Some concerns | Low | Low | Some concerns | High risk | |
| Some concerns | Some concerns | Low | Low | Some concerns | High risk | |
| Some concerns | Some concerns | Low | Low | Some concerns | High risk | |
| Some concerns | Some concerns | Low | Low | Some concerns | High risk | |
| Some concerns | Some concerns | Low | Low | Some concerns | High risk | |
| Some concerns | Low | Low | Low | Some concerns | High risk | |
| Some concerns | Some concerns | Low | Low | Some concerns | High risk | |
| Some concerns | Low | Low | Low | Some concerns | High risk | |
| Some concerns | Low | Low | Low | Some concerns | High risk | |
| Some concerns | Some concerns | Low | Low | Some concerns | High risk | |
| Low | Some concerns | Low | Low | Some concerns | High risk | |
| Low | Low | Low | Low | Some concerns | Some concerns |
Risk of bias in 13 non-randomized controlled trials.
| Source | Bias Due to Confounding | Bias in Selecting Participants | Bias in Classification of the Interventions | Bias Due to Deviations from Intended Interventions | Bias Due To Missing Data | Bias in Measurement of Outcomes | Bias in Selection of the Reported Result | Overall Risk of Bias |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Moderate | Moderate | Moderate | Low | Low | Low | Moderate | Moderate | |
| Critical | Serious | Moderate | Low | NI | Low | Moderate | Critical | |
| Critical | NI | Low | Low | Low | Low | Moderate | Critical | |
| NI | Low | Moderate | Low | Low | Low | Moderate | Moderate | |
| Moderate | Moderate | Moderate | Low | Low | Low | Low | Moderate | |
| Serious | Moderate | Moderate | Low | Low | Low | Moderate | Serious | |
| Critical | Moderate | Serious | Low | Low | Low | Moderate | Critical | |
| Serious | Serious | Low | Low | Low | Low | Moderate | Serious | |
| Critical | Serious | Serious | Low | Low | Low | Moderate | Critical | |
| Moderate | Moderate | Serious | Low | Low | Low | Moderate | Serious | |
| Serious | Moderate | NI | Low | Low | Low | Moderate | Serious | |
| Serious | Serious | Serious | Low | Low | Low | Moderate | Serious | |
| Serious | Moderate | Low | Low | Low | Low | Low | Serious |
NI = No information.
Quality of 9 case series.
| Source | Q1 | Q2 | Q3 | Q4 | Q5 | Q6 | Q7 | Q8 | Q9 | Q10 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Y | Y | Y | N | N | N | N | Y | N | N/A | |
| Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | N | N | Y | N | N/A | |
| Y | Y | Y | Y | U | N | Y | Y | N | N/A | |
| Y | Y | Y | N | N | N | N | Y | N | Y | |
| Y | Y | Y | U | U | N | N | Y | N | Y | |
| N | Y | Y | N | N | N | Y | Y | N | N/A | |
| Y | Y | Y | N | N | Y | Y | Y | N | Y | |
| N | Y | N | Y | Y | N | Y | Y | N | Y | |
| Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | N | Y | Y | N | N/A |
Y = Yes, N= No, U = Unclear, N/A not applicable. Q1 Were there clear criteria for inclusion in the case series? Q2 Was the condition measured in a standard, reliable way for all participants included in the case series? Q3 Were valid methods used for identification of the condition for all participants included in the case series? Q4 Did the case series have consecutive inclusion of participants? Q5 Did the case series have complete inclusion of participants? Q6 Was there clear reporting of the demographics of the participants in the study? Q7 Was there clear reporting of clinical information of the participants? Q8 Were the outcomes or follow up results of cases clearly reported? Q9 Was there clear reporting of the presenting site(s)/clinic(s) demographic information? Q10 Was statistical analysis appropriate?
Quality of 15 case reports.
| Source | Q1 | Q2 | Q3 | Q4 | Q5 | Q6 | Q7 | Q8 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| N/A 1 | N/A 2 | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | |
| N | N | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | |
| Y | N | Y | U | Y | Y | Y | Y | |
| N/A 1 | N/A 2 | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | |
| N/A 1,3 | N/A 2 | Y | Y | U | Y | Y | Y | |
| N/A 1 | N/A 2 | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | |
| Y | N | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | |
| N/A 1 | N/A 2 | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | |
| U | Y | Y | Y | Y | U | Y | Y | |
| N | N | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | |
| Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | |
| N | N | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | |
| N | N | U | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | |
| N/A 1,3 | N/A 2 | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | |
| N | N | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y |
Abbreviations: Y = Yes; N= No; U = Unclear; N/A not applicable. Q1 Were patient’s demographic characteristics clearly described? Q2 Was the patient’s history clearly described and presented as a timeline? Q3 Was the current clinical condition of the patient on presentation clearly described? Q4 Were diagnostic tests or assessment methods and the results clearly described? Q5 Was the intervention(s) or treatment procedure(s) clearly described? Q6 Was the post-intervention clinical condition clearly described? Q7 Were adverse events (harms) or unanticipated events identified and described? Q8 Does the case report provide takeaway lessons? 1 This case report concerned a neonate in the first days of life. There was no information available about the neonates’ medical history, previous treatment and past diagnostic test results. 2 This case report concerned a neonate in the first days of life. There was no information available about the patients’ medical, family and psychosocial history (including relevant information, as well as relevant past interventions and their outcomes). 3 Diagnosis, treatment/medication and medical history of the mother were described, but not of the neonate.
Studies with bradycardia as outcome measure.
| Article | Study Groups | Bradycardia | Heart Rate | Definition of Bradycardia | Time of Control of Bradycardia |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ß-blocker vs. methyldopa | 5/252 (2.0%) vs. 5/199 (2.5%) (NS) | Diagnosis of bradycardia was retrieved from medical reports | N | ||
| ß-blocker vs. control | 6/153 (3.9%) vs. 0/153 (0%) | Heart rate < 100 bpm | In the first 48 h after birth | ||
| Labetalol vs. nifedipine | 0/280 (0%) vs. 0/297 (0%) | Heart rate < 110 bpm | N | ||
| Labetalol vs. control | 0/22 vs. 0/22 vs. 0/22 | N | In the first 24 h after birth | ||
| ß-blocker vs. control | 165/10,585 (1.6%) vs. 11,659/2,281,531 (0.5%) | Heart rate ≤ 100 bpm | N | ||
| Labetalol vs. control | 4/55 (7.3%) vs. 1/54 (1.9%) | Heart rate < 100 bpm | In the first minutes after birth and during the first 48 h | ||
| Labetalol vs. methyldopa | 1/45 (2.22%) vs. 0/45 (0%) (NS) | N | N | ||
| Labetalol vs. hydralazine | 11/103 (10.6%) vs. 2/102 (1.9%) ( | Heart rate < 110 bpm | N | ||
| Labetalol vs. control | 6/48 (12.5%) vs 4/81 (5%) (NS) | Heart rate < 100 bpm | At 5-min as part of Apgar scoring | ||
| Pindolol vs. placebo | 2 | Heart rate < 100 bpm | During the first 24 h after birth | ||
| Labetalol vs. placebo | 4/70 (5.7%) vs. 4/74 (5.4%) | Heart rate < 120 bpm | At five minutes | ||
| Labetalol vs. control | 0/15 (0%) vs. 0/10 (0%) | 138.2 ± 2.5 vs. 144 ± 3.2 (NS) | N | During 10–20 min after birth and thereafter for 12 to 24 h | |
| Labetalol vs. hydralazine | 0/13 (0%) vs. 0/6 (0%) | Heart rate < 110 bpm | N | ||
| Labetalol vs. control | No difference between the two groups | N | At 2, 4, 8,16, 24, 48 and 72 h after birth | ||
| 3 | |||||
| Metoprolol and hydralazine vs. control (intended-to-treat) 4
| 1/82 (1.2%) vs. 4/79 (5.1%) | N | N | ||
| 5 | |||||
| Acebutolol vs. methyldopa | 0/9 vs. 0/11 | N | N | ||
| Atenolol vs. placebo | 18/46 (39.1%) vs. 4/39 (10.3%) ( | Heart rate < 120 bpm | Continuously recorded in the first 24 h after birth | ||
| Atenolol (no control group) | 6 | N | N | ||
| Propranolol vs. methyldopa | 0/14 (0%) vs. 0/14 (0%) | N | During 48 h after birth | ||
| Acebutolol (no control group) | 12/31 (38.7%) | Basal heart rate < 120 beats per minute and lasting longer than 1 h | During 72 h after birth | ||
| Bendroflumethiazide + metoprolol vs. metoprolol + hydralazine vs. Bendroflumethiazide + hydralazine | 7/101 vs. 1/83 vs. 16/97 (8/184 vs. 16/97) | Heart rate < 100 bpm | At birth | ||
| Labetalol vs. hydralazine | 3/3 (100%) vs. 0/3 (0%) | Heart rate < 100 bpm | Immediately after birth | ||
| Atenolol (no control group) | 0/9 (0%) | Heart rate < 120 bpm | During 24 h after birth | ||
| Acebutolol vs. methyldopa | Day 1: 118 ± 19 vs. 132 ± 9 ( | N | Daily during the 3 first days after birth, when the babies were sleeping | ||
| Sotalol (no control group) | 6/12 (50%) | Heart rate < 120 bpm | Four-hourly for at least 24 h | ||
| Propranolol (no control group) | 1/12 (8.3%) | N | N |
Abbreviations: N: is not described in article; NS: not significant; bpm: beats per minute. 1 PS-matched: Propensity scores were estimated using a logistic regression model in which exposure was the dependent variable and was estimated on the basis of 5 groups of potential confounders of the planned analysis: demographic characteristics, medical conditions, obstetrical conditions, maternal medications, and measures of healthcare use [35]. 2 As regards other outcome variables, namely, the Apgar score, respiratory and heart rate at delivery, hypoglycemia and jaundice during the first 24 h—the differences between the two treatment groups were inconsistent and non-significant [44]. 3 Hypotension, bradycardia and transient tachypnea were observed in one infant. The article does not describe if there were any other cases of bradycardia. 4 For the analyses, the material was divided into two categories. The first group gives data for all the 161 patients whom it was the intention to treat. In the calculation of cause-and-effect, 26 patients were withdrawn from the original group of 161: in 5 patients of C-group, DBP exceeded 110 mmHg and they were then treated with antihypertensive drugs; one patient in T-group admitted that she had not taken the prescribed drugs; 6 patients gave birth to malformed or stillborn children and their data were not used for the calculation of Apgar scores, birth weights or other vitality signs. Eight patients in the T-group and 6 in the C-group gave birth within 2 weeks after admission to the study, and these 14 women were excluded from the cause-and-effect analyses because of the short treatment period [50]. 5 One infant in the placebo group had a bradycardia in the first 12 h of life. The article does not describe if there were any other cases of bradycardia. 6 Bradycardia was only investigated in one of the seven infants [27]. At no time did this infant have bradycardia or any other clinical sign of beta-blockade [27].
Figure 2Funnel plots bradycardia—RCT (a) and proportion based meta-analysis (b).
Figure 3Meta-analysis bradycardia—RCT. Beta-blocker vs. methyldopa: [27,33,38]; beta-blocker vs. placebo: [45,51,53]; beta-blocker vs. hydralazine: [40,47,59]; beta-blocker vs. calcium channel blocker [33]; beta-blocker with hydralazine vs. placebo: [50].
Beta-blockers compared to other antihypertensive drugs or placebo in mothers with gestational hypertension.
| 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 Other Antihypertensive Drugs or Placebo | With Beta-Blockers | Risk with Other Antihypertensive Drugs or Placebo | Risk Difference with Beta-Blockers | ||||||||
|
| |||||||||||
| 2,293,407 | Serious a | Serious b | not serious | Serious c | strong association | ⨁⨁◯◯ | 11,669/2,282,318 (0.5%) | 175/11089 (1.6%) | 5 per 1000 | ||
|
| |||||||||||
| 45 cases 800 controls | very serious d | very serious e | not serious | very serious f | none | ⨁◯◯◯ | 45 cases 800 controls | Low | |||
| 0 per 1000 | |||||||||||
|
| |||||||||||
| 2013 | very serious g | not serious | not serious | not serious | none | ⨁⨁◯◯ | 15/1017 (1.5%) | 38/996 (3.8%) | 15 per 1000 | ||
|
| |||||||||||
| 2,374,957 | Serious h | serious i | not serious | not serious | strong association | ⨁⨁⨁◯ | 29,954/2,362,830 (1.3%) | 620/12,127 (5.1%) | 13 per 1000 | ||
|
| |||||||||||
| 168 cases 416 controls | very serious j | not serious i | not serious | Serious k | none | ⨁◯◯◯ | 168 cases 416 controls | Low | |||
| 0 per 1000 | |||||||||||
|
| |||||||||||
| 2051 | Serious l | not serious | not serious | serious c | none | ⨁⨁◯◯ | 57/1018 (5.6%) | 77/1033 (7.5%) | 56 per 1000 | ||
CI: confidence interval; RR: risk ratio. Explanations a All the studies had a moderate risk of overall bias. b I2 > 50%. c 95% CI crosses line of no effect. d The study with the highest weightage had a serious risk of overall bias. e I2 = 82%. f Very low event rates and 95% CI shows appreciable benefit and harm. g Most of the studies had a high risk of overall bias. h The study contributing to maximum weightage had a moderate risk of overall bias. i Though the I2 was large, it was due to differences between the small and large magnitude of effects. j Most of the studies had a serious to critical risk of overall bias. k Optimal information criterion (OIS) not satisfied due to a low event rate and sample size. l The studies with highest weightage had a high risk of overall bias or some concerns. ⨁◯◯◯: Very low, ⨁⨁◯◯: Low, ⨁⨁⨁◯: Moderate and ⨁⨁⨁⨁: High.
Figure 4Meta-analysis bradycardia—Cohort and case–control studies. Cohort studies: beta-blocker vs. placebo: [30,35]; beta-blocker vs. methyldopa: [30]. Case control studies: beta-blocker vs. hydralazine: [58]; beta-blocker vs. placebo: [32,37,43]; beta-blocker vs. methyldopa: [52].
Figure 5Proportion-based meta-analysis bradycardia. Acebutalol: [48,52,56]; sotalol: [62]; propranolol: [55,64]; atenolol: [51,53,57]; labetalol: [33,37,38,40,43,45,47,59]; metoprolol and hydralazine: [50,58].
Studies with hypoglycemia as outcome measure.
| Article | Study Groups | Hypoglycemia | Blood Glucose (mmol/L) | Definition of Hypoglycemia | Time of Control of Hypoglycemia |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Propranolol vs. placebo | 11/45 (24.4%) vs. 8/49 (16.3%) ( | Blood sugar < 40 md/dL | N | ||
| ß-blocker vs. methyldopa | 7/252 (2.8%) vs. 3/199 (1.5%) (NS) | Blood glucose < 35 mg/dl at the first day of life or <45 mg/dL after the first day of life | N | ||
| ß-blocker vs. no disease | 78/228 (34.6%) vs. 914/4103 (22.2%) ( | Blood glucose < 40 mg/dL | At least 30 min after feeding. Feeding was initiated as soon as possible after delivery. | ||
| ß-blocker vs. control | 47/153 (30.7%) vs. 28/153 (18.3%) | Glucose < 40 mg/dL on the first day of life | Hours 1, 2, 4 and 6 of life and every 8 h thereafter (to complete a 48-h follow-up) | ||
| Labetalol vs. nifedipine | 0/290 (0%) vs. 1/298 (<1%) | N | N | ||
| ß-blocker vs. control | 460/10,585 (4.3%) vs. 27,228/2,281,531 (1.2%) | Glucose ≤ 35 mg/dL | N | ||
| Labetalol vs. hydralazine | NS | N | N | ||
| Labetalol vs. control | 26/55 (47.3%) vs. 23/54 (42.6%) | Glucose < 2.7 mmol/L | In the first 48 postnatal hours | ||
| Labetalol vs. methyldopa | 1/45 (2.22%) vs. 2/45 (4.44%) (NS) | N | N | ||
| ß-blocker vs. control | 34/405 (8.4%) vs. 1771/75,688 (2.3%) | N | N | ||
| Labetalol vs. hydralazine | 6/103 (5.8%) vs. 6/102 (5.8%) | Plasma glucose < 35 mg/dL | N | ||
| Atenolol vs. isradipine | 26/40 (65%) vs. 24/39 (61.5%) ( | Blood glycemia levels < 40 mg/dL | 1, 3, 6, 12 and 24 h after birth | ||
| Hydralazine vs. hydralazine and propranolol | 76.4 ± 16.5 vs. 62.6 ± 14.0 mg% ( | N | In the first 48 postnatal hours | ||
| Labetalol vs. control | 23/48 (47.9%) vs. 14/81 (17.2%) ( | Blood glucose value of <30 mg/dL irrespective of gestational age, within the first 72 h of life and below 40 mg/dL thereafter | First at 1–2 h of age and again at 4–6 h of age, thereafter 2–6 hourly depending on the previous blood glucose results. The monitoring was stopped once at least two blood glucose values were above 40 mg on an oral feeding alone | ||
| Pindolol vs. placebo | 3 | Blood glucose < 25 mg/dL | During the first 24 h of life | ||
| Labetalol vs. placebo | 4/70 (5.7%) vs. 3/74 (4.1%) | Blood glucose < 1.4 nmol/L | N | ||
| Labetalol vs. control | 0/15 (0%) vs. 0/10 (0%) | 53.4 ± 2.8 vs. 50 ± 3.1 (NS) | N | Within 10 to 20 min of delivery | |
| Labetalol vs. hydralazine | 1/10 (10%) vs. 0/10 (0%) | N | Every 4 h, for 1 day | ||
| Labetalol vs. hydralazine | 1/13 (7.7%) vs. 1/6 (16.7%) | Blood glucose < 35 mg/dL | N | ||
| Labetalol vs. control | 4 | <35 mg/dL | At 2, 4, 8,16, 24, 48 and 72 h after birth | ||
| Metoprolol and hydralazine vs. control (intended-to-treat) 5
| 9/82 (11.0%) vs. 11/79 (13.9%) | Blood glucose ≤ 1.7 mmol/L | N | ||
| Acebutolol vs. methyldopa | 0/9 vs. 0/11 | N | N | ||
| Atenolol vs. placebo | 1/46 (2.2%) vs. 4/39 (10.3%) (NS) | Confirmed serum glucose < 1.4 nmol/L | At 1, 4, 6, 12 and 24 h | ||
| Atenolol or metoprolol (no control group) | 4/95 (4.2%) | N | N | ||
| Propranolol vs. methyldopa | 2/14 (14.3%) vs. 0/14 (0%) | N | For 48 h after delivery | ||
| Beta blocker (no control group) | 1/125 (0.8%) | N | At birth | ||
| Atenolol (no control group) | 2/9 (22%) | N | During the first 24 h of life | ||
| Bendroflumethiazide + metoprolol vs. metoprolol + hydralazine vs. Bendroflumethiazide + hydralazine | 6 | N | N | ||
| Acebutolol vs. methyldopa | 6/10 vs. 1/10 | Day 1: 1.60 mmol/L ± 0.99 vs. 2.55 mmol/L ± 0.42 (NS), Day 2: 2.63 mmol/L ± 0.50 vs. 2.47 mmol/L ± 0.63 (NS), Day 3: 3.29 mmol/L ± 1.53 vs. 2.72 mmol/L ± 1.19 (NS) | N | Daily within the 3 first days of life, for the first time at about three hours of life and on the second and third days of life two hours after feeding | |
| Propranolol (no control group) | 2/14 (14.3%) | Blood glucose < 35 mg/dL | Frequently In the first few hours of life | ||
| Sotalol (no control group) | 1/12 (8.33%) | N | Four-hourly | ||
| Oxprenolol vs. methyldopa | 3.8 ± 0.27 vs. 2.8 ± 0.36 mmol/L | N | N | ||
| Propranolol (no control group) | 3/12 (25%) | N | N | ||
| Propranolol (no control group) | 0/22 (0%) | N | N |
N: is not described in article. NS: not significant. 1 PS-matched: Propensity scores were estimated using a logistic regression model in which exposure was the dependent variable and was estimated on the basis of 5 groups of potential confounders of the planned analysis: demographic characteristics, medical conditions, obstetrical conditions, maternal medications, and measures of healthcare use [35]. 2 Hypoglycemia was grouped under endocrine and metabolic disturbances specific to newborns, which included neonatal hypoglycemia [39]. 3 As regards other outcome variables, namely, the Apgar score, respiratory and heart rate at delivery, hypoglycemia and jaundice during the first 24 h—the differences between the two treatment groups were inconsistent and non-significant [44]. 4 Blood glucose levels were mostly within the normal reported range of 2.0–5.0 mmol/L for term infants, but they all tended towards the lower limit, with a range of 1.8–4.2 mmol/L, with a median of 3.2 mmol/l. No infant was clinically hypoglycemic at any time [49]. 5 For the analyses, the material was divided into two categories. The first group gives data for all the 161 patients for whom it was the intention to treat. In the calculation of cause-and-effect, 26 patients were withdrawn from the original group of 161: in 5 patients of C-group, DBP exceeded 110 mmHg and they were then treated with antihypertensive drugs; one patient in the T-group admitted that she had not taken the prescribed drugs; 6 patients gave birth to malformed or stillborn children and their data were not used for the calculation of Apgar scores, birth weights or other vitality signs. Eight patients in the T-group and 6 in the C-group gave birth within 2 weeks after admission to the study, and these 14 women were excluded from the cause-and-effect analyses because of the short treatment period [50]. 6 There were no abnormal changes in heart frequency, P-glucose, P-bilirubin and maturity of the lungs of the new-born infants in groups A and B in comparison with group C, in which no adrenergic beta-blocking agent was used [58].
Figure 6Meta-analysis hypoglycemia—Cohort and case–control studies. Cohort studies: beta-blockers vs. placebo: [30,31,35,39]; beta-blockers vs. methyldopa: [30]; beta-blockers vs. calcium channel blocker: [39]. Case control studies: beta-blocker vs. placebo: [32,37,43]; beta-blockers vs. methyldopa: [52,60].
Figure 7Funnel plots hypoglycemia—RCT (a) and proportion based meta-analysis (b).
Figure 8Meta-analysis hypoglycemia—RCT. Beta-blocker vs. methyldopa: [33,38,55]; beta-blockers vs. hydralazine: [40,46,47]; beta-blockers vs. calcium channel blockers: [33,41]; beta-blocker with hydralazine vs. placebo: [50]; beta-blockers vs. placebo [41,45,53].
Figure 9Proportion-based meta-analysis of hypoglycemia. Sotalol: [62]; propranolol: [55,64,65]; atenolol: [41,53,57]; propranolol and hydralazine: [61]; labetalol: [33,35,37,38,40,43,45,46,47]; metoprolol and hydralazine: [50]; metoprolol: [35]; acebutalol: [52,60].
Overview case-reports.
| Source | Country | Treatment | Beta-Blocker | Dosage | Blood Glucose | Heart Rate |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Italy | Unspecified | Nebivolol | 5 mg per day | 30 mg/dL | x | |
| United States | Hypertension | Labetalol | 150 mg two | 1.7 mmol/L (30 mg/dL) | 111 after birth | |
| United States | Hypertension prior | Labetalol | Single 30 mg | 31 mg/dL (twin A) | <80 (both twins) | |
| The | Hypertension prior | Labetalol | 50 mg/hour | Not described in | Severe bradycardia immediately after delivery. On admission the heart rate was 140 | |
| The | Pregnancy induced | Labetalol | 600 mg (200 | 1.2 mmol/l | <80 after delivery, 148 later | |
| Israel | Postpartum | Atenolol | 100 mg daily | x | 80 | |
| United States | Hypertension | Nadolol | 20 mg once | 20 mg/dl | 136 after birth | |
| South Africa | Uncontrolled | Atenolol | 100 mg daily | 2–5 mmol/L (45 mg/100 mL) | 138 | |
| Israel | Chronic | Propranolol | 160 --> 60 | 37 mg/dL (first pregnancy) | 150 (first pregnancy) | |
| United States | Idiopathic | Propranolol | 60 mg 4 times | 25–45 mg/100 ml | Sinus bradycardia (heart rate not mentioned) | |
| United States | Idiopathic | Propranolol | 80 mg daily | No hypoglycemia | 110–120, with a short period of 80 during sleep | |
| United States | Hyperthyroidism | Propranolol | 10 mg 4 times | 20 mg/dL (case 1) | 80 within one hour of delivery (case 1) 4
| |
| United States | Chronic | Propranolol | 160 mg per | Too low to be detected by the Dextrostix method | 40 at birth, later it varied between 100 and 165 | |
| United States | Essential | Propranolol | 240 mg per | 11 mg/dL | 70–90 during first day of life. Rose with stimulation to 120/minute. Was 120–130/minute on day 5 | |
| Scotland | Hypertrophic | Propranolol | 30 mg 3 times | 12 mg/100 mL | x |
1 The heart rate remained low for 72 h, and frequent short episodes of bradycardia occurred that were not associated with apnea and that resolved spontaneously [72]. 2 At the time of conception, the mother was placed on a regimen of 160 mg/day. Three weeks prior to term, the propranolol dosage was reduced to 60 mg/day in preparation for the delivery [74]. 3 In case 1, the mother was receiving propranolol 20 mg for times a day at time of delivery [77]. 4 The bradycardia persisted for most of the first 36 h of life, and the heart rate remained between 100 to 120 per minute for most of the second 36 h [77]. 5 Frequent episodes of bradycardia during the first 24 h of life and occasional episodes over the next 48 h [77]. 6 The infant had occasional episodes of bradycardia (heart rate 80 to 90/minute) during the first 48 h of life, but his heart rate generally ranged between 100 to 120/minute [77]. 7 The day prior to the Cesarean section, she received 60 mg propranolol every six hours and 60 mg was given orally six hours before surgery; an additional 3 mg was given intravenously one hour before the operation [78]. 8 The mother was taking 240 mg/day at the time of conception. The dose was decreased to 160 mg/day in the fourth month of pregnancy [79].