• Anaesthesia · Jan 2020

    Review Meta Analysis

    Prevention of hypotension after spinal anaesthesia for caesarean section: a systematic review and network meta-analysis of randomised controlled trials.

    Why is this review important?

    Although the importance of managing spinal anaesthesia-associated hypotension during caesarean section is well appreciated, there continues to be some debate over relative efficacy of interventions, whether vasopressors or fluid-loading.

    Fitzgerald at al.'s review and network meta-analysis quantitatively compares a complete range of interventions across 109 studies.

    What did they show?

    Vasopressors were more effective at preventing intra-operative hypotension than fluid infusion techniques alone. Although there was no statistically significant difference in the incidence of hypotension among metaraminol, phenylephrine or noradrenaline/norepinephrine, metaraminol appeared the most effective (OR 0.04-0.26) and ephedrine the least (0.09-0.85). [vs Norepinephrine (OR 0.06-0.28), Phenylephrine (OR 0.11-0.29)]

    Similarly, nausea and vomiting incidence was lower with vasopressors than other interventions. Phenylephrine more commonly caused bradycardia than other pressors, and ephedrine more commonly tachycardia. There was no significant difference in reactive hypertension.

    The bottom-line...

    The most effective way of preventing and managing maternal intraoperative hypotension is, as international guidelines already assert, alpha-agonist vasopressors. Using more complex protocols, such as phenylephrine or norepinephrine infusions, does not appear to offer benefit over metaraminol. Fluid infusions are at best a secondary intervention.

    summary
    • J P Fitzgerald, K A Fedoruk, S M Jadin, B Carvalho, and S H Halpern.
    • Department of Anesthesia, Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre and the University of Toronto, ON, Canada.
    • Anaesthesia. 2020 Jan 1; 75 (1): 109-121.

    AbstractSpinal anaesthesia for caesarean section commonly causes maternal hypotension. This systematic review and network meta-analysis compared methods to prevent hypotension in women receiving spinal anaesthesia for caesarean section. We selected randomised controlled trials that compared an intervention to prevent hypotension with another intervention or inactive control by searching MEDLINE and Embase, Web of Science to December 2018. There was no language restriction. Two reviewers extracted data on trial characteristics, methods and outcomes. We assessed risk of bias for individual trials (Cochrane tool) and quality of evidence (GRADE checklist). We assessed 109 trials (8561 women) and 12 different methods that resulted in 30 direct comparisons. Methods ranked by OR (95%CI) from most effective to least effective were: metaraminol 0.11 (0.04-0.26); norepinephrine 0.13 (0.06-0.28); phenylephrine 0.18 (0.11-0.29); leg compression 0.25 (0.14-0.43); ephedrine 0.28 (0.18-0.43); colloid given before induction of anaesthesia 0.38 (0.24-0.61); angiotensin 2, 0.12 (0.02-0.75); colloid given after induction of anaesthesia 0.52 (0.30-0.90); mephentermine 0.09 (0.01-1.30); crystalloid given after induction of anaesthesia 0.78 (0.46-1.31); and crystalloid given before induction of anaesthesia 1.16 (0.76-1.79). Phenylephrine caused maternal bradycardia compared with control, OR (95%CI) 0.23 (0.07-0.79). Ephedrine lowered umbilical artery pH more than phenylephrine, standardised mean difference (95%CI) 0.78 (0.47-1.49). We conclude that vasopressors should be given to healthy women to prevent hypotension during caesarean section with spinal anaesthesia.© 2019 Association of Anaesthetists.

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    This article appears in the collection: Which is the best vasopressor to avoid hypotension during spinal anaesthesia for Caesarean section?.

    Notes

    summary
    1

    Why is this review important?

    Although the importance of managing spinal anaesthesia-associated hypotension during caesarean section is well appreciated, there continues to be some debate over relative efficacy of interventions, whether vasopressors or fluid-loading.

    Fitzgerald at al.'s review and network meta-analysis quantitatively compares a complete range of interventions across 109 studies.

    What did they show?

    Vasopressors were more effective at preventing intra-operative hypotension than fluid infusion techniques alone. Although there was no statistically significant difference in the incidence of hypotension among metaraminol, phenylephrine or noradrenaline/norepinephrine, metaraminol appeared the most effective (OR 0.04-0.26) and ephedrine the least (0.09-0.85). [vs Norepinephrine (OR 0.06-0.28), Phenylephrine (OR 0.11-0.29)]

    Similarly, nausea and vomiting incidence was lower with vasopressors than other interventions. Phenylephrine more commonly caused bradycardia than other pressors, and ephedrine more commonly tachycardia. There was no significant difference in reactive hypertension.

    The bottom-line...

    The most effective way of preventing and managing maternal intraoperative hypotension is, as international guidelines already assert, alpha-agonist vasopressors. Using more complex protocols, such as phenylephrine or norepinephrine infusions, does not appear to offer benefit over metaraminol. Fluid infusions are at best a secondary intervention.

    Daniel Jolley  Daniel Jolley
    pearl
    1

    Vasopressors are the most effective method for preventing maternal hypotension, nausea & vomiting after spinal anaesthesia, with metaraminol possibly the best.

    Daniel Jolley  Daniel Jolley
     
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