Lewis Sharon R, Pritchard Michael W, Schofield-Robinson Oliver J, Alderson Phil, Smith Andrew F
Lancaster Patient Safety Research Unit, Royal Lancaster Infirmary, Pointer Court 1, Ashton Road, Lancaster, UK, LA1 4RP.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2018 Jul 18;7(7):CD012584. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD012584.pub2.
Antiplatelet agents are recommended for people with myocardial infarction and acute coronary syndromes, transient ischaemic attack or stroke, and for those in whom coronary stents have been inserted. People who take antiplatelet agents are at increased risk of adverse events when undergoing non-cardiac surgery because of these indications. However, taking antiplatelet therapy also introduces risk to the person undergoing surgery because the likelihood of bleeding is increased. Discontinuing antiplatelet therapy before surgery might reduce this risk but subsequently it might make thrombotic problems, such as myocardial infarction, more likely.
To compare the effects of continuation versus discontinuation for at least five days of antiplatelet therapy on the occurrence of bleeding and ischaemic events in adults undergoing non-cardiac surgery under general, spinal or regional anaesthesia.
We searched the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (CENTRAL; 2018, Issue 1), MEDLINE (1946 to January 2018), and Embase (1974 to January 2018). We searched clinical trials registers for ongoing studies, and conducted backward and forward citation searching of relevant articles.
We included randomized controlled trials of adults who were taking single or dual antiplatelet therapy, for at least two weeks, and were scheduled for elective non-cardiac surgery. Included participants had at least one cardiac risk factor. We planned to include quasi-randomized studies.We excluded people scheduled for minor surgeries under local anaesthetic or sedation in which bleeding that required transfusion or additional surgery was unlikely. We included studies which compared perioperative continuation of antiplatelet therapy versus discontinuation of antiplatelet therapy or versus substitution of antiplatelet therapy with a placebo for at least five days before surgery.
Two review authors independently assessed studies for inclusion, extracted data, assessed risk of bias and synthesized findings. Our primary outcomes were: all-cause mortality at longest follow-up (up to six months); all-cause mortality (up to 30 days). Secondary outcomes included: blood loss requiring transfusion of blood products; blood loss requiring further surgical intervention; risk of ischaemic events. We used GRADE to assess the quality of evidence for each outcome MAIN RESULTS: We included five RCTs with 666 randomized adults. We identified three ongoing studies.All study participants were scheduled for elective general surgery (including abdominal, urological, orthopaedic and gynaecological surgery) under general, spinal or regional anaesthesia. Studies compared continuation of single or dual antiplatelet therapy (aspirin or clopidogrel) with discontinuation of therapy for at least five days before surgery.Three studies reported adequate methods of randomization, and two reported methods to conceal allocation. Three studies were placebo-controlled trials and were at low risk of performance bias, and three studies reported adequate methods to blind outcome assessors to group allocation. Attrition was limited in four studies and two studies had reported prospective registration with clinical trial registers and were at low risk of selective outcome reporting bias.We reported mortality at two time points: the longest follow-up reported by study authors up to six months, and time point reported by study authors up to 30 days. Five studies reported mortality up to six months (of which four studies had a longest follow-up at 30 days, and one study at 90 days) and we found that either continuation or discontinuation of antiplatelet therapy may make little or no difference to mortality up to six months (risk ratio (RR) 1.21, 95% confidence interval (CI) 0.34 to 4.27; 659 participants; low-certainty evidence); the absolute effect is three more deaths per 1000 with continuation of antiplatelets (ranging from eight fewer to 40 more). Combining the four studies with a longest follow-up at 30 days alone showed the same effect estimate, and we found that either continuation or discontinuation of antiplatelet therapy may make little or no difference to mortality at 30 days after surgery (RR 1.21, 95% CI 0.34 to 4.27; 616 participants; low-certainty evidence); the absolute effect is three more deaths per 1000 with continuation of antiplatelets (ranging from nine fewer to 42 more).We found that either continuation or discontinuation of antiplatelet therapy probably makes little or no difference in incidences of blood loss requiring transfusion (RR 1.37, 95% CI 0.83 to 2.26; 368 participants; absolute effect of 42 more participants per 1000 requiring transfusion in the continuation group, ranging from 19 fewer to 119 more; four studies; moderate-certainty evidence); and may make little or no difference in incidences of blood loss requiring additional surgery (RR 1.54, 95% CI 0.31 to 7.58; 368 participants; absolute effect of six more participants per 1000 requiring additional surgery in the continuation group, ranging from seven fewer to 71 more; four studies; low-certainty evidence). We found that either continuation or discontinuation of antiplatelet therapy may make little or no difference to incidences of ischaemic events (to include peripheral ischaemia, cerebral infarction, and myocardial infarction) within 30 days of surgery (RR 0.67, 95% CI 0.25 to 1.77; 616 participants; absolute effect of 17 fewer participants per 1000 with an ischaemic event in the continuation group, ranging from 39 fewer to 40 more; four studies; low-certainty evidence).We used the GRADE approach to downgrade evidence for all outcomes owing to limited evidence from few studies. We noted a wide confidence in effect estimates for mortality at the end of follow-up and at 30 days, and for blood loss requiring transfusion which suggested imprecision. We noted visual differences in study results for ischaemic events which suggested inconsistency.
AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: We found low-certainty evidence that either continuation or discontinuation of antiplatelet therapy before non-cardiac surgery may make little or no difference to mortality, bleeding requiring surgical intervention, or ischaemic events. We found moderate-certainty evidence that either continuation or discontinuation of antiplatelet therapy before non-cardiac surgery probably makes little or no difference to bleeding requiring transfusion. Evidence was limited to few studies with few participants, and with few events. The three ongoing studies may alter the conclusions of the review once published and assessed.
抗血小板药物推荐用于心肌梗死和急性冠脉综合征患者、短暂性脑缺血发作或中风患者,以及已植入冠状动脉支架的患者。因这些适应症而服用抗血小板药物的患者在接受非心脏手术时发生不良事件的风险会增加。然而,进行抗血小板治疗也会给手术患者带来风险,因为出血的可能性增加了。术前停用抗血小板治疗可能会降低这种风险,但随后可能会使血栓形成问题(如心肌梗死)更易发生。
比较在全身麻醉、脊髓麻醉或区域麻醉下接受非心脏手术的成年人中,抗血小板治疗持续至少五天与停用抗血小板治疗的效果,以观察出血和缺血事件的发生情况。
我们检索了Cochrane对照试验中心注册库(CENTRAL;2018年第1期)、MEDLINE(1946年至2018年1月)和Embase(1974年至2018年1月)。我们检索了临床试验注册库以查找正在进行的研究,并对相关文章进行了前后向引文检索。
我们纳入了正在服用单药或双药抗血小板治疗至少两周且计划进行择期非心脏手术的成年人的随机对照试验。纳入的参与者至少有一个心脏危险因素。我们计划纳入半随机研究。我们排除了计划在局部麻醉或镇静下进行小手术的患者,这类手术不太可能出现需要输血或额外手术的出血情况。我们纳入了比较围手术期抗血小板治疗持续用药与术前至少五天停用抗血小板治疗或用安慰剂替代抗血小板治疗效果的研究。
两位综述作者独立评估研究是否纳入、提取数据、评估偏倚风险并综合研究结果。我们的主要结局为:最长随访期(长达六个月)的全因死亡率;30天内的全因死亡率。次要结局包括:需要输注血液制品的失血量;需要进一步手术干预的失血量;缺血事件风险。我们使用GRADE方法评估每个结局的证据质量。
我们纳入了五项随机对照试验,共666名随机分组的成年人。我们确定了三项正在进行的研究。所有研究参与者均计划在全身麻醉、脊髓麻醉或区域麻醉下进行择期普通外科手术(包括腹部、泌尿外科、骨科和妇科手术)。研究比较了单药或双药抗血小板治疗(阿司匹林或氯吡格雷)持续用药与术前至少五天停用治疗的效果。三项研究报告了充分的随机方法,两项报告了分配隐藏方法。三项研究为安慰剂对照试验,表现偏倚风险较低,三项研究报告了充分的方法使结局评估者对分组分配不知情。四项研究中的失访情况有限,两项研究报告了在临床试验注册库中的前瞻性注册,选择性结局报告偏倚风险较低。我们在两个时间点报告了死亡率:研究作者报告的最长随访期长达六个月,以及研究作者报告的30天时间点。五项研究报告了长达六个月的死亡率(其中四项研究最长随访期为30天,一项研究为90天),我们发现抗血小板治疗持续用药或停用在长达六个月的死亡率方面可能几乎没有差异(风险比(RR)1.21,95%置信区间(CI)0.34至4.27;659名参与者;低确定性证据);抗血小板治疗持续用药时每1000人中有多三人死亡(范围从少八人到多40人)。仅将四项最长随访期为30天的研究合并显示了相同的效应估计值,我们发现抗血小板治疗持续用药或停用在术后30天的死亡率方面可能几乎没有差异(RR 1.21,95%CI 0.34至4.27;616名参与者;低确定性证据);抗血小板治疗持续用药时每1000人中有多三人死亡(范围从少九人到多42人)。我们发现抗血小板治疗持续用药或停用在需要输血的失血量发生率方面可能几乎没有差异(RR 1.37,95%CI 0.83至2.26;368名参与者;持续用药组每1000人中需要输血的参与者多42人,范围从少19人到多119人;四项研究;中等确定性证据);在需要额外手术的失血量发生率方面可能几乎没有差异(RR 1.54,95%CI 0.31至7.58;368名参与者;持续用药组每1000人中需要额外手术的参与者多六人,范围从少七人到多71人;四项研究;低确定性证据)。我们发现抗血小板治疗持续用药或停用在术后30天内缺血事件(包括外周缺血、脑梗死和心肌梗死)的发生率方面可能几乎没有差异(RR 0.67,95%CI 0.25至1.77;616名参与者;持续用药组每1000人中发生缺血事件的参与者少17人,范围从少39人到多40人;四项研究;低确定性证据)。由于研究数量有限,证据有限,我们使用GRADE方法对所有结局的证据进行了降级。我们注意到随访结束时和30天时死亡率以及需要输血的失血量的效应估计值置信区间较宽,这表明存在不精确性。我们注意到缺血事件研究结果的视觉差异,这表明存在不一致性。
我们发现低确定性证据表明,非心脏手术前抗血小板治疗持续用药或停用在死亡率、需要手术干预的出血或缺血事件方面可能几乎没有差异。我们发现中等确定性证据表明,非心脏手术前抗血小板治疗持续用药或停用在需要输血的出血方面可能几乎没有差异。证据仅限于少数研究、少数参与者和少数事件。三项正在进行的研究一旦发表并经过评估,可能会改变本综述的结论。