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BMJ 2006;332:1482 (24 June), doi:10.1136/bmj.332.7556.1482
blockade in patients with diabetes undergoing major non-cardiac surgery: randomised placebo controlled, blinded multicentre trial
Anne Benedicte Juul, research fellow1, Jørn Wetterslev, chief physician1, Christian Gluud, head of department1, Allan Kofoed-Enevoldsen, chief physician in endocrinology2, Gorm Jensen, head of department3, Torben Callesen, consultant in anaesthesiology4, Peter Nørgaard, consultant in anaesthesiology5, Kim Fruergaard, consultant in anaesthesiology5, Morten Bestle, consultant in anaesthesiology5, Rune Vedelsdal, consultant in anaesthesiology6, André Miran, registrar in anaesthesiology6, Jon Jacobsen, consultant in anaesthesiology7, Jakob Roed, consultant in anaesthesiology7, Maj-Britt Mortensen, senior registrar in anaesthesiology7, Lise Jørgensen, senior registrar in anaesthesiology4, Jørgen Jørgensen, senior registrar in anaesthesiology8, Marie-Louise Rovsing, senior registrar in anaesthesiology8, Pernille Lykke Petersen, senior registrar in anaesthesiology8, Frank Pott, senior registrar in anaesthesiology8, Merete Haas, senior registrar in anaesthesiology8, Rikke Albret, senior registrar in anaesthesiology8, Lise Lotte Nielsen, senior registrar in anaesthesiology8, Gun Johansson, consultant in anaesthesiology9, Pia Stjernholm, consultant in anaesthesiology7, Yvonne Mølgaard, senior registrar in anaesthesiology7, Nikolai Bang Foss, senior registrar in anaesthesiology3, Jeanie Elkjær, senior registrar in anaesthesiology3, Bjørn Dehlie, senior registrar in anaesthesiology3, Klavs Boysen, consultant in anaesthesiology10, Dusanka Zaric, consultant in anaesthesiology10, Anne Munksgaard, senior registrar in anaesthesiology10, Jørn Bo Madsen, chief physician in anaesthesiology4, Bjarne Øberg, consultant in anaesthesiology4, Boris Khanykin, senior registrar in anaesthesiology4, Tine Blemmer, senior registrar in anaesthesiology11, Stig Yndgaard, consultant in anaesthesiology4, Grazyna Perko, senior registrar in anaesthesiology4, Lars Peter Wang, consultant in anaesthesiology4, Per Winkel, consultant statistician1, Jørgen Hilden, statistician12, Per Jensen, statistician12, Nader Salas, data manager1, DIPOM Trial Group
1 Copenhagen Trial Unit, Centre for Clinical Intervention Research, H:S Rigshospitalet, Copenhagen University Hospital, Denmark, 2 Department of Internal Medicine, Kolding Fredericia Hospital, Denmark, 3 Department of Cardiology and Anaesthesiology, H:S Hvidovre Hospital Copenhagen University Hospital, Denmark, 4 Department of Anaesthesiology, H:S Rigshospitalet, Copenhagen University Hospital, Denmark, 5 Department of Anaesthesiology, KAS Gentofte, Copenhagen University Hospital, Denmark, 6 Department of Anaesthesiology, KAS Herlev Hospital, Copenhagen University Hospital, Denmark, 7 Department of Anaesthesiology, KAS Glostrup, Copenhagen University Hospital, Denmark, 8 Department of Anaesthesiology, H:S Bispebjerg Hospital, Copenhagen University Hospital, Denmark, 9 Department of Anaesthesiology, Amager Hospital, Copenhagen University Hospital, Denmark, 10 Department of Anaesthesiology, H:S Fredriksberg Hospital, Copenhagen University Hospital, Denmark, 11 Department of Anaesthesiology, FAC Hillerød, Hillerød, Denmark, 12 Department of Biostatistics, Faculty of Health Sciences, Copenhagen University, Denmark
Correspondence to: A B Juul anne.j{at}ctu.rh.dk
Objectives To evaluate the long term effects of perioperative
blockade on mortality and cardiac morbidity in patients with diabetes undergoing major non-cardiac surgery.
Design Randomised placebo controlled and blinded multicentre trial. Analyses were by intention to treat.
Setting University anaesthesia and surgical centres and one coordinating centre.
Participants 921 patients aged > 39 scheduled for major non-cardiac surgery.
Interventions 100 mg metoprolol controlled and extended release or placebo administered from the day before surgery to a maximum of eight perioperative days.
Main outcome measures The composite primary outcome measure was time to all cause mortality, acute myocardial infarction, unstable angina, or congestive heart failure. Secondary outcome measures were time to all cause mortality, cardiac mortality, and non-fatal cardiac morbidity.
Results Mean duration of intervention was 4.6 days in the metoprolol group and 4.9 days in the placebo group. Metoprolol significantly reduced the mean heart rate by 11% (95% confidence interval 9% to 13%) and mean blood pressure by 3% (1% to 5%). The primary outcome occurred in 99 of 462 patients in the metoprolol group (21%) and 93 of 459 patients in the placebo group (20%) (hazard ratio 1.06, 0.80 to 1.41) during a median follow-up of 18 months (range 6-30). All cause mortality was 16% (74/462) in the metoprolol group and 16% (72/459) in the placebo group (1.03, 0.74 to 1.42). The difference in risk for the proportion of patients with serious adverse events was 2.4% (- 0.8% to 5.6%).
Conclusions Perioperative metoprolol did not significantly affect mortality and cardiac morbidity in these patients with diabetes. Confidence intervals, however, were wide, and the issue needs reassessment.
Trial registration Current Controlled Trials ISRCTN58485613 [controlled-trials.com] .
Cardiac morbidity and mortality after non-cardiac surgery is 11% to 34% in patients with diabetes, recent myocardial infarction, unstable angina, or congestive heart failure.1-4 Complications are probably due to perioperative myocardial ischaemia.1 5
Perioperative
blockade is recommended in patients at cardiac risk undergoing major non-cardiac surgery.6 The recommendations are based on the results of small trials indicating that patients at cardiac risk should receive perioperative
blockade when they undergo major non-cardiac surgery.2 5 7 8 Devereaux et al carried out a meta-analysis of trials on perioperative
blockers up to April 2003.8 They found insufficient evidence for a reduction of major cardiovascular events.8 Subsequently, the perioperative
blockade (POBBLE) trial failed to show significant effects of perioperative
blockade on mortality and major cardiovascular events in patients undergoing vascular surgery.9
The multicentre study group of perioperative ischaemia suggested that diabetes was a significant predictor of postoperative death.5 7 Perioperative
blockade in patients with diabetes and additional risk factors for coronary artery disease seemed beneficial, with a two year hazard ratio for death of 0.25 (P = 0.03).7 The American College of Cardiology and the American Heart Association assert that patients with diabetes have the same risk as coronary artery disease patients6 and therefore may benefit from perioperative
blockade.10 11 We conducted the diabetes postoperative mortality and morbidity (DIPOM) trial to assess metoprolol versus placebo for patients with diabetes undergoing major non-cardiac surgery.10
The DIPOM trial is an investigator initiated and controlled, randomised placebo controlled, multicentre trial with central randomisation and blinding of all parties in all phases.10 The code was broken when analyses were completed and a conclusion formulated.
Organisation
Thirteen anaesthesia and surgical centres in nine hospitals in the greater Copenhagen area participated. An independent and blinded event committee adjudicated all reports of outcomes registered in public databases. An independent and blinded data monitoring and safety committee assessed the interim analyses.10 The Copenhagen trial unit coordinated randomisation, collection, and distribution of patients' records to the event and safety committees, data entry, and data management. Clean files were exported to the department of biostatistics, University of Copenhagen, for analyses.
Patient recruitment
Between 1 July 2000 and 1 July 2002 project nurses contacted eligible patients aged > 39 with diabetes who were scheduled for major (that is, expected duration over one hour) non-cardiac surgery. Patients with either insulin or non-insulin dependent diabetes were included.12 All participants gave written informed consent. Exclusion criteria were: no written informed consent; systemic treatment with
blocker; conditions indicating
blocker treatment; New York Heart Association class IV congestive heart failure; third degree atrioventricular blockade; pregnancy or breast feeding; allergic to metoprolol or placebo; or previously included in the DIPOM trial.10
Randomisation
A computer generated the allocation sequence and served a telephone voice response randomisation system. The allocation sequence was in blocks of eight and stratified for centre, age > 65, sex, expected perioperative stress (high and intermediate risk or low risk surgery), history of coronary artery disease, and active malignant disease.10 Patients were randomly assigned to metoprolol succinate controlled/extended release (CR/XL) or matching placebo. When possible patients were given a test dose of 50 mg study drug the evening before surgery (day 1). If it was tolerated, they were given two 50 mg tablets (full daily dose) at least two hours before induction of anaesthesia on the day of surgery (day 2). The study drug was administered once daily until discharge from the hospital or to a maximum of eight days. Half dose was given in patients with a heart rate of 55-65 beats per minute and systolic blood pressure3 100 mm Hg. The study drug was withheld in patients with a heart rate < 55 beats per minute or systolic blood pressure < 100 mm Hg. When oral administration was not feasible, 5 mg metoprolol or matching placebo was given intravenously before surgery and every sixth hour. Incorrect dosing of trial drug was considered a protocol violation.
Follow-up
We collected morbidity and mortality data from the Danish national hospital register, which contains information about all somatic hospital admissions in Denmark,10 and the centralised civil register, which records the vital status of all inhabitants in Denmark.10 In addition, all patients were recalled six months after discharge, when we recorded use of
blockers after discharge and an electrocardiogram.
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Statistical analysis
We estimated that 30% of patients in the placebo group would have a primary outcome due to a shorter follow-up, inclusion of younger patients, and the wide 95% confidence interval in previous studies.7 11 To detect a 33% relative risk reduction in the metoprolol group we needed a sample size of 824 patients with a two sided
= 0.05 and power (1-
) = 0.90. We aimed to randomise 1000 patients.10
We compared Kaplan-Meier survival curves by log rank test. To estimate the intervention effect, we used univariate Cox regression models as the primary analyses. Adjusted intervention effects were calculated with all variables used for stratification during randomisation in a multivariate Cox regression analysis.13 We also calculated cumulated intensities, time dependent effects, and residual plots substantiating proportional hazards. We performed a prespecified subgroup analysis of the patients fulfilling the inclusion criteria in the trial of Mangano et al (having at least one risk factor for coronary artery disease besides diabetes and undergoing high risk or intermediate risk surgery7 11). P < 0.05 was considered significant.
We randomised 921 patients: 462 to metoprolol and 459 to placebo. All patients were followed up until 1 January 2003 and analysed in intention to treat analyses; 733 patients (80%) were analysed in per protocol analyses (fig 1). Baseline and surgical characteristics were comparable in the two groups (table 1). In addition to diabetes, 496 of the patients (54%) had a history of, or an additional risk factor for, coronary artery disease and were undergoing high risk or intermediate risk surgery. The median follow-up was 18 months (range 6-30 months). At six months, 720 patients (78%) had an outpatient follow-up, and 713 patients (77%) underwent electrocardiography. Seven patients in the metoprolol group and five in the placebo group had received
blockers during follow-up.
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Primary outcome
Overall 99 of 462 patients in the metoprolol group (21%) and 93 of 459 patients in the placebo group (20%) had a primary outcome. Figure 2 shows the Kaplan-Meier estimates of the primary outcome measure in the two groups (log rank test P = 0.66). Within 30 days postoperatively 27 of 462 patients in the metoprolol group (6%, 95% confidence interval 4% to 8%) and 21 of 459 patients in the placebo group (5%, 3% to 7%) had a primary outcome.
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Mortality and cardiac morbidity
There were no significant differences between the intervention groups in any of the secondary outcomes. Seventy four of 462 patients (16%) in the metoprolol group and 72 of 459 in the placebo group (16%) died (1.03, 0.74 to 1.42). In a multivariate analysis with all stratification variables in the model the hazard ratio of death was 1.01 (0.72 to 1.41). Addition of preoperative insulin treatment to the multivariate analysis changed the hazard ratio of the intervention effect to 1.03 (0.74 to 1.42), and the effect of preoperative insulin treatment was not significant (P = 0.068). Forty six of 462 patients in the metoprolol group and 45 of 459 in the placebo group had a cardiac outcome (1.02, 0.67 to 1.67), with an adjusted hazard ratio of 1.03 (0.69 to 1.54). We found similar non-significant effects of metoprolol on cardiac mortality, non-fatal cardiac morbidity, or non-cardiac mortality (table 3).
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Safety outcomes
The administration of metoprolol was associated with a significant increase in low heart rate and blood pressure; 147 of 462 patients in the metoprolol group (32%) and 80 of 459 in the placebo group (17%) had episodes of heart rate < 65 beats per minute or systolic blood pressure < 100 mm Hg (table 4). Serious adverse events occurred in 8% in the metoprolol group and 5% in the placebo group, a risk difference of 2.4% (- 0.8% to 5.6%) (table 5).
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Compliance and haemodynamics
In total 358 patients in the metoprolol group and 375 in the placebo group received the as intended intervention; one or more minor protocol violations occurred in 104 patients in the metoprolol group and 84 in the placebo group (fig 1).
The test dose was administered the day before surgery in 678 patients (74%). The target dose thereafter was 100 mg metoprolol or placebo daily. Several patients received either half the dose or no study drug because of low blood pressure or low heart rate (table 4). The mean duration of drug administration was 4.6 (range 0 to 8) days in the metoprolol group and 4.9 (0 to 8) days in the placebo group.
The heart rate and blood pressure were measured immediately before the next dose of study drug (table 6). Before the first dose of study drug, the mean heart rate and mean arterial pressure did not differ between the two groups. Thereafter, patients in the metoprolol group had significantly lower mean heart rate by 11% (9% to 13%, P < 0.001) and mean arterial pressure by 3% (1% to 5%, P < 0.02). In two patients in the metoprolol group and five in the placebo group we discontinued the trial drug because treatment with
blockers was indicated.
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The results of this trial showed that compared with placebo, metoprolol has no significant effect on short or long term outcomes in patients with diabetes undergoing major non-cardiac surgery. This finding was consistent across the intention to treat and per protocol analyses as well as in analyses of the 496 patients with additional risk factors for coronary artery disease.
Strengths and limitations
This trial was a multicentre trial of the long term effects of metoprolol. We used adequate methods for generation of the allocation sequence and allocation concealment.14 We made efforts to maintain blinding through selection, treatment, monitoring, data management, and data analyses. Blinding is difficult in
blocker trials because of changes in pulse and blood pressure, but the event committee performed blinded outcome assessment.10 We used metoprolol in a sustained release formulation, comparable with atenolol,15 as long acting
blockers offer better protection than short acting ones.16 Our trial is comparable with previous trials8 regarding intervention, dose, duration, the inclusion of patients at intermediate and high risk, surgery, and outcome measures, but we excluded patients already taking
blockers.17 A total of 496 of our patients met the inclusion criteria used by Mangano et al,7 nearly two and a half times the sample size in that trial.7
The potential limitations of this trial are that we included only patients with diabetes and we may not have included enough patients. However, 21% in the placebo group developed a primary outcome, enabling us to detect a hypothetical 7% absolute risk reduction with a power of 80%, making our trial far more sensitive than previous trials.8 A daily dose of 100 mg metoprolol controlled/extended release may not have ensured sufficient
blockade, but heart rates and reductions in blood pressure were similar to those seen in previous trials.2 8 Initiating
blockade with a higher dose in patients with cardiac risks before surgery may jeopardise the patients. In fact, several patients in this trial did not tolerate the full dose. Our intervention lasted longer than most of the trials included in the meta-analysis by Devereaux et al.8 We experienced fewer primary outcomes than expected during follow-up. Our analyses indicate that we cannot exclude a beneficial effect of 20% or less or a detrimental effect of 40% or less (table 2). Confounding by patients with a
2 adrenergic receptor genotype18 is unlikely but possible.
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Comparison with related research
Previous trials that showed a positive effect of perioperative
blockers on morbidity and mortality may have overestimated the effect.8 These trials had several methodological problems.8 14 Pooling the trials with low bias risk from the meta-analysis of Devereaux et al,8 the POBBLE trial,9 and the current trial showed no significant effect of
blockers on 30 day perioperative myocardial infarction (relative risk 0.85, 0.49 to 1.46) or on 30 day mortality (1.15, 0.68 to 1.95). Even when we included a high bias risk trial2 in the analysis
blockers did not significantly reduce 30 day mortality (0.89, 0.55 to 1.43). Admittedly, the 95% confidence interval leaves room for both benefit and harm. With 2112 patients randomised to perioperative
blockade for non-cardiac surgery we may still observe both beneficial or harmful effects.19 In a retrospective study of 663 635 patients, Lindenauer et al found that patients with the highest cardiac risk scores might benefit from perioperative
blockade.20 Patients with the lowest cardiac risk score and diabetes, however, might be harmed by
blockade (odds ratios for death 1.28, 1.10 to 1.50).20 Our trial shows significant mortality and morbidity in patients with diabetes undergoing non-cardiac surgery, confirming previous observations.7 11 21 Adjusment for preoperative insulin treatment in the multivariate analysis did not significantly affect the hazard ratio of metoprolol in our trial.
Our results show no significant effect of perioperative metoprolol on cardiac morbidity and mortality in patients with diabetes undergoing major non-cardiac surgery. The evidence is insufficient to recommend perioperative
blockers for patients at risk of cardiac morbidity. It is premature for policy making organisations to use treatment with perioperative
blocker as a measure of hospital quality.22 23 Therapeutic actions ought to await the perioperative ischemic evaluation study (POISE)24 and systematic reviews.
Contributors: The DIPOM Trial Group consists of investigators from public hospitals in the greater Copenhagen area. Principal investigators were PN, KF, JW, RV, JJ, YM, PS, TC, LJ, JJ, GJ, NBF, KB, JBM, TB, and SY. Clinical investigators were MB, ABJ, AM, JR, M-BM, M-LR, PLP, RA, FP, MH, LLN, JE, BD, DZ, AM, BØ, LPW, BK, GP, JW, and PW. NS developed the data management systems and was responsible for data management. PJ and JH carried out statistical analyses. ABJ (coordinating investigator and guarantor), CG, JW, AKE, GJ, and TC formed the steering committee.
Funding: AstraZeneca, Danish Heart Foundation, Danish Diabetes Foundation, Copenhagen Hospital Corporation's Research Council, Danish Medical Research Council's "Program for Strengthening Regional Collaboration within Medical Health Research," and Copenhagen Hospital Corporation.
Competing interests: None declared.
Ethical approval: The trial was approved by the local ethics committee (journal No AGF/USS KA 99077ms), the Danish Medicines Agency (journal No AD-MET-0003), and the Danish Data Protection Agency.
blockers for elective surgery in elderly patients: population based, retrospective cohort study. BMJ 2005:331: 932.
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blockers and statins in non-cardiac surgery
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