The effects of diuretic deprescribing in adult patients: A systematic review to inform an evidence‐based diuretic deprescribing guideline

Author:

van Poelgeest Eveline12ORCID,Paoletti Luca3ORCID,Özkök Serdar4ORCID,Pinar Ezgi4ORCID,Bahat Gülistan4ORCID,Vuong Vincent56ORCID,Topinková Eva789ORCID,Daams Joost10ORCID,McCarthy Lisa56ORCID,Thompson Wade11ORCID,van der Velde Nathalie12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Internal Medicine/Geriatrics, Amsterdam University Medical Center University of Amsterdam Meibergdreef 9 Amsterdam The Netherlands

2. Aging and Later Life Amsterdam Public Health Research Institute Amsterdam The Netherlands

3. Pharmacy Department IRCCS San Raffaele Hospital Milan Italy

4. Istanbul Medical Faculty, Department of Internal Medicine, Division of Geriatrics, Capa Istanbul University Istanbul Turkey

5. Trillium Health Partners Mississauga Ontario Canada

6. Leslie Dan Faculty of Pharmacy University of Toronto Toronto Ontario Canada

7. Department of Geriatrics 1st Faculty of Medicine Charles University Prague Czech Republic

8. General Faculty Hospital Prague Czech Republic

9. Faculty of Health and Social Sciences University of South Bohemia České Budějovice Czech Republic

10. Medical Library, Amsterdam University Medical Center University of Amsterdam Amsterdam The Netherlands

11. Department of Anesthesiology, Pharmacology, and Therapeutics, Faculty of Medicine University of British Columbia Vancouver Canada

Abstract

In this systematic review, we report on the effects of diuretic deprescribing compared to continued diuretic use. We included clinical studies reporting on outcomes such as mortality, heart failure recurrence, tolerability and feasibility. We assessed risk of bias and certainty of the evidence using the GRADE framework. We included 25 publications from 22 primary studies (15 randomized controlled trials; 7 nonrandomized studies). The mean number of participants in the deprescribing groups was 35, and median/mean age 64 years. In patients with heart failure, there was no clear evidence that diuretic deprescribing was associated with increased mortality compared to diuretic continuation (low certainty evidence). The risk of cardiovascular composite outcomes associated with diuretic deprescribing was inconsistent (studies showing lower risk for diuretic deprescribing, or comparable risk with diuretic continuation; very low certainty evidence). The effect on heart failure recurrence after diuretic deprescribing in patients with diuretics for heart failure, and of hypertension in patients with diuretics for hypertension was inconsistent across the included studies (low certainty evidence). In patients with diuretics for hypertension, diuretic deprescribing was well tolerated (moderate certainty evidence), while in patients with diuretics for heart failure, deprescribing diuretics can result in complaints of peripheral oedema (very low certainty evidence). The overall risk of bias was generally high. In summary, this systematic review suggests that diuretic discontinuation could be a safe and feasible treatment option for carefully selected patients. However, there isa lack of high‐quality evidence on its feasibility, safety and tolerability of diuretic deprescribing, warranting further research.

Publisher

Wiley

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