Multicentre randomised controlled study comparing carvedilol with variceal band ligation in the prevention of variceal rebleeding
Stanley, Adrian J. and Dickson, Sheila and Hayes, Peter C. and Forrest, Ewan H. and Mills, Peter R. and Tripathi, Dhiraj and Leithead, Joanna A. and MacBeth, Kim and Smith, Lyn and Gaya, Daniel R. and Suzuki, Harry and Young, David (2014) Multicentre randomised controlled study comparing carvedilol with variceal band ligation in the prevention of variceal rebleeding. Journal of Hepatology, 61 (5). pp. 1014-1019. ISSN 0168-8278 (https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jhep.2014.06.015)
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BACKGROUND & AIMS: Rebleeding after an initial oesophageal variceal haemorrhage remains a significant problem despite therapy with band ligation, non-selective β-blockers or a combination of these. Carvedilol is a vasodilating non-selective β-blocker with alpha-1 receptor and calcium channel antagonism. Arecent study has suggested it is effective in the prevention of a first variceal bleed. Our aim was to compare oral carvedilol with variceal band ligation (VBL) in the prevention of rebleeding following a first variceal bleed. METHODS: Patients who were stable 5 days after presentation with a first oesophageal variceal haemorrhage and had not been taking β-blockers were randomised to oral carvedilol or VBL. Patients were followed-up after one week, monthly, then every 3 months. The primary end point was variceal rebleeding on intention-to-treat analysis. RESULTS: 64 patients were randomised, 33 to carvedilol and 31 to VBL. 58 (90.6%) patients had alcohol related liver disease. Age and Child-Pugh score were similar in both groups at baseline. Median follow-up was 26.3 (interquartile range [IQR]10.2-46.6) months. Compliance was 68% and 65% for carvedilol and VBL respectively (p=0.993) and serious adverse events between the two groups were similar (p=0.968). Variceal rebleeding occurred during follow-up in 12 (36.4%) and 11 (35.5%) patients in the carvedilol and VBL groups, respectivel y(p=0.857), with 9 (27.3%) and 16 (51.6%) deaths in each group, respectively (p=0.110). CONCLUSIONS: Carvedilol is not superior to VBL in the prevention of variceal rebleeding. The trend to a survival benefit for patients taking this drug compared with those undergoing banding requires further exploration.
ORCID iDs
Stanley, Adrian J., Dickson, Sheila, Hayes, Peter C., Forrest, Ewan H., Mills, Peter R., Tripathi, Dhiraj, Leithead, Joanna A., MacBeth, Kim, Smith, Lyn, Gaya, Daniel R., Suzuki, Harry and Young, David ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-3652-0513;-
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Item type: Article ID code: 55206 Dates: DateEvent1 November 2014Published19 June 2014Published Online9 June 2014AcceptedSubjects: Medicine > Internal medicine Department: University of Strathclyde > University of Strathclyde
Faculty of Science > Mathematics and StatisticsDepositing user: Pure Administrator Date deposited: 21 Dec 2015 12:56 Last modified: 11 Nov 2024 11:08 Related URLs: URI: https://strathprints.strath.ac.uk/id/eprint/55206