May 2, 2008

Beta-Blockers in Hypertension?

"Should we stop using beta-blockers as first line therapy in hypertension?"


National and international guidelines have promoted beta-blockers as being on equal footing with thiazide diuretics, calcium channel blockers (CCBs), or renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system (RAAS) blockers, including angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitors and angiotensin-receptor blockers (ARBs).

 
But the latest review of the evidence presented in an issue of the Journal of the American College of Cardiology (JACC) in 2007 noted that no study has shown that beta-blocker monotherapy reduces morbidity or mortality in hypertensive patients, even when compared with placebo despite three decades of using beta-blockers for hypertension.


Indeed, in some early trials, such as the British Medical Research Council study in the elderly, beta-blocker monotherapy was not only ineffective, but whenever a beta-blocker was added to diuretics, the benefits of the antihypertensive therapy distinctly diminished.


Besides that recent data of an analysis evaluating 13 randomized controlled trials of beta-blockers compared to other antihypertensive drugs show that the relative risk of stroke was 16% higher for beta-blockers than for other drugs and there was no difference in terms of myocardial infarction (MI). When the effect of beta-blockers were compared with that of placebo or no treatment, the relative risk of stroke was reduced by 19% for all beta-blockers, but that was about half the risk reduction expected from previous hypertension trials using other agents and, again, there was no difference for MI or mortality.


In a 2006 analysis, compared to placebo, beta-blockers reduced the risk of stroke with a marginal fall in total cardiovascular events, but beta-blockers had no effect on all-cause mortality, coronary heart disease, or cardiovascular mortality. Moreover, the effect on stroke was less than that of CCBs and RAAS inhibitors, and the effect on total cardiovascular events was less than that of CCBs. Moreover, patients on beta-blockers were more likely to discontinue treatment than those on diuretics or RAAS inhibitors.

Other problems associated with beta-blocker therapy reviewed by JACC:

  • Beta-blockers reduce blood pressure compared with placebo. However, compared with other antihypertensive agents, the blood pressure-lowering efficacy of beta-blockers is suboptimal.  
  • Beta-blockers are not only less efficacious at reducing peripheral blood pressure but also have a lesser effect on perhaps the more important central aortic pressure when compared with RAAS blockers, diuretics, and calcium antagonists.  
  • All hypertension management guidelines recommend weight loss and/or avoidance of medications that cause weight gain in obese hypertensive patients. Beta-blocker use, however, has been associated with small but systematic weight gain (as much as 1.2 kg).  
  • Exercise endurance in a healthy person depends, in part, on a properly functioning sympathetic nervous system. Beta-blockers, by antagonizing this effect, may hamper exercise capacity.

What would account for the increased risk of stroke by beta-blockers?
Based on evidence that just about every antihypertensive trial that included an atenolol arm will show more new diabetes (30%-40% increased incidence) at follow-up.
At least one of the probable mechanisms is that beta-blockers cause insulin resistance -- and, thus, cause new diabetes. This may explain why even though they lower blood pressure, beta-blockers do not actually decrease cardiovascular events and stroke.
Another mechanism may be endothelial dysfunction which comes a long with insulin-resistance.


Strength of Evidence for the Use of Beta-Blockers in Cardiovasular Disease

Article modified from Medscape.

8 comments:

Unknown said...

wow....... u doing research eh? haha

ZhiHao Chua said...

ppl did research...
i m just conveying the info.. lol

Slavomir SUCH said...

I am impressed . I am a medical doctor and I am right now preparing a lecture for general practitioners in my area about the paradigma shift regards to using of beta blockers in hypertension treatment . It is very exciting what is happening now, the newest results of meta analysis and results of ASCOT and CAFE trials, we have to refelet that data and change our treatment habits and strategies...isn't it so ? Your blog is excelent and I use the same information source as you did MEDSCAPE, Cochrane library, etc. Btw. where are you from < I am from Slovakia
www.med-centrum.sk is my web page. P.S. who are the singers of the songs you have on ypur page ? P.s. 2 - I have also myface page - search for slavomir such , Bye. Slavo

ZhiHao Chua said...

wow!
i din expect some doctor reading my blog, haha
and i just did a summary of the reports i read online.
i'm from malaysia, and currently studying in russia, medical student
and nice to know u!
the singers, the first girl is Lily Allen

Slavomir SUCH said...

Congrat, you are better than many GPs in knowledge of hypertension treatment ... which cours of medical school you are in ? I have finished university in 1990. i was also as a student in Kiev and Moscow for several weeks - it was in 1997 , I guess there has been changed a lot of things since then. Are you studying in Moscow ? I do not remember name of the dormitory where I stayed at 1997 ...it was several subway stations form the down town. I naver been in malaysia ! Sounds kind of exotic to me. Tropical jungle, islands, vulkanos ? TGake ccare and say hallo to Moscow - Btw. I know even russian lenguagem, I learned it in school since my age of 12 until I have finshed unversity - so more than ten years. I used to speak better russian than english. you are doing your studies in russian or in english ? We do have a meedical school in my cioty in SLovakia / Martin / and we do have a plenty foreign students , mostly from SAudi arabia, Kuwait and Norway I have had a school mate even from Afghanistan. They are studying in english, not in slovak .

ZhiHao Chua said...

cool!
i m in 4th course
and i study in moscow!
i know a little bit of russian language, need it to survive over here. and we study in english too.. which is good, but patients dont speak english, so we gotta kinda communicate with the patients inn russian.
malaysia's nice, go visit if u can.. anyway, there's no volcanos there, so it's kinda safe, hahaha
take care!

Slavomir SUCH said...

Kinda cool weather must be in Moscow at the moment...unlike in Malaysia. Sorry for my geografical incompetence...where the active voulkanos should be anyway ? In Indonesia ? Filipins ? I have few l japaneese elctronic devices which were manufactured in Malaysia. Slovakia ispretty small country / populaation of 5 millions / but we just joined Europeanunin and we use an EURO like our currency and we do not need passport to travell all across the Europe. Are there medicine studies hard in Moscow?

ZhiHao Chua said...

u r right.. indonesia and philippines have volcanos.
medicine is always hard, i think... LOL