Pteridines | 2021

Norepinephrine was superior in death risk reducing and hemodynamics compared to dopamine in treatment of patients with septic shock

 
 
 

Abstract


Abstract Background To investigate the clinical effects of norepinephrine versus dopamine in treatment of septic shock by pooling the data form open published clinical trials. Material and Methods The clinical trials relevant to norepinephrine versus dopamine in treatment of septic shock were electronically searched in the databases of Pubmed, Embase, the Cochrane Library, Web of Science, Google scholar and CNKI. The original data related to the treatment effects such as death risk, oxygen metabolism and hemodynamics index were extracted from the included original studies. The death risk was pooled by the effect size of relative risk (RR), the oxygen metabolism and hemodynamics index were pooled by standard mean difference (SMD) and the corresponding 95% confidence interval (95%CI). The publication bias was evaluated by Begg s funnel plot and Egger s line regression test. Results Thirteen clinical trials were included in the meta-analysis. The pooled results demonstrated the death risk was significantly decreased (RR=0.89, 95%CI:0.81 to 0.98, p=0.024) in septic shock patients who received norepinephrine compared to those receiving dopamine. The HR (SMD=−1.84, 95%CI: −2.86 to −0.81, p<0.01) and cardiac index (SMD=−0.74, 95%CI: −1.01 to −0.48, p<0.01) were lower in norepinephrine group compared to dopamine group. The systemic vascular resistance index (SMD=1.33, 95%CI:0.62 to 2.04, p<0.01) in norepinephrine group was higher than those of dopamine group with statistical difference. The Begg s funnel plot and Egger s line regression test (t=−0.84, p=0.425) showed no publication bias. Conclusions Based on the present evidence, norepinephrine was superior to dopamine in the aspects of death risk reducing and hemodynamics.

Volume 32
Pages 5 - 10
DOI 10.1515/pteridines-2021-0002
Language English
Journal Pteridines

Full Text