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Effects of extended-release metoprolol succinate in patients undergoing non-cardiac surgery (POISE trial): a randomised controlled trial

Authors :
Arintaya Phrommintikul
Jose Antônio Marin-Neto
Matthew Chan
P V RAMANA
ALBEN SIGAMANI
Jonas Malmstedt
Ross Kerridge
Kate Leslie
Salim Yusuf
Richard Merchant
Tony GIN
Katalin Darvas
Miriam De Nadal
Claes Held
ALVARO AVEZUM
Maria Ximena Rojas-Reyes
German Malaga
Gregory Bryson
Duminda Wijeysundera
Wilson Cañon-Montañez
Kenneth Gilbert
Paul Myles
Gerard Urrútia
Denilson Albuquerque
Victor Montori
Source :
The Lancet. 371:1839-1847
Publication Year :
2008
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2008.

Abstract

SummaryBackgroundTrials of β blockers in patients undergoing non-cardiac surgery have reported conflicting results. This randomised controlled trial, done in 190 hospitals in 23 countries, was designed to investigate the effects of perioperative β blockers.MethodsWe randomly assigned 8351 patients with, or at risk of, atherosclerotic disease who were undergoing non-cardiac surgery to receive extended-release metoprolol succinate (n=4174) or placebo (n=4177), by a computerised randomisation phone service. Study treatment was started 2–4 h before surgery and continued for 30 days. Patients, health-care providers, data collectors, and outcome adjudicators were masked to treatment allocation. The primary endpoint was a composite of cardiovascular death, non-fatal myocardial infarction, and non-fatal cardiac arrest. Analyses were by intention to treat. This trial is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, number NCT00182039.FindingsAll 8351 patients were included in analyses; 8331 (99·8%) patients completed the 30-day follow-up. Fewer patients in the metoprolol group than in the placebo group reached the primary endpoint (244 [5·8%] patients in the metoprolol group vs 290 [6·9%] in the placebo group; hazard ratio 0·84, 95% CI 0·70–0·99; p=0·0399). Fewer patients in the metoprolol group than in the placebo group had a myocardial infarction (176 [4·2%] vs 239 [5·7%] patients; 0·73, 0·60–0·89; p=0·0017). However, there were more deaths in the metoprolol group than in the placebo group (129 [3·1%] vs 97 [2·3%] patients; 1·33, 1·03–1·74; p=0·0317). More patients in the metoprolol group than in the placebo group had a stroke (41 [1·0%] vs 19 [0·5%] patients; 2·17, 1·26–3·74; p=0·0053).InterpretationOur results highlight the risk in assuming a perioperative β-blocker regimen has benefit without substantial harm, and the importance and need for large randomised trials in the perioperative setting. Patients are unlikely to accept the risks associated with perioperative extended-release metoprolol.FundingCanadian Institutes of Health Research; Commonwealth Government of Australia's National Health and Medical Research Council; Instituto de Salud Carlos III (Ministerio de Sanidad y Consumo), Spain; British Heart Foundation; AstraZeneca.

Details

ISSN :
01406736
Volume :
371
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Lancet
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....ef11ee48a78ae4d5e52b1dd8322e7917