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Evidence summaries

Beta-Blockers in the Prevention of Gastrointestinal Bleeding in Patients with Cirrhosis and Esophageal Varices

Beta-adrenergic-antagonist drugs appear to be effective in reducing fatal and nonfatal first-time gastrointestinal bleeding in patients with cirrhosis and esophageal varices but not improve total 2-year mortality. Level of evidence: "B"

Entry characteristics and outcome data were collected from the physicians of patients participating in 4 randomized trials on propranolol and nadolol 1. Patients were followed for 2 years in 2 studies and for 1 year in the others. Patients had a spectrum of severity of cirrhosis (2 trials excluded severe cases) and esophageal varices but no previous variceal bleeding. Patients had been randomized to propranolol (n = 203) or nadolol (n = 83) in doses that reduced the heart rate by approximately 25%, or to placebo (n = 165), ranitidine (n = 49), or vitamin K (n = 89).

Fatal and nonfatal upper gastrointestinal bleeding and total mortality were reported over a mean follow-up period of 491 days.

27% (82) of comparison patients, but only 16% (49) of beta blocker patients had gastrointestinal bleeding (relative risk reduction, 41%; number needed to treat to prevent 1 bleeding episode = 10). The case-fatality rates within 6 weeks of bleeding were 52% and 43% among comparison and beta blocker patients, respectively (95% CI for difference of 10%, -8% to 27%). Total mortality at 2 years was 32% among comparison patients and 29% among b-blocker patients (P >0.2). (This summary was abstracted from an ACP Journal Club abstract).

Comment: The quality of evidence is downgraded by sparse data.

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    References

    • Poynard T, Calès P, Pasta L, Ideo G, Pascal JP, Pagliaro L, Lebrec D. Beta-adrenergic-antagonist drugs in the prevention of gastrointestinal bleeding in patients with cirrhosis and esophageal varices. An analysis of data and prognostic factors in 589 patients from four randomized clinical trials. Franco-Italian Multicenter Study Group. N Engl J Med 1991 May 30;324(22):1532-8. [PubMed]

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