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Diuretics are among the most widely used drugs, particularly for the treatment of hypertension and of various conditions associated with sodium retention.
Considering the widespread use of diuretics over a long period (chlorothiazide was introduced in 1957) their safety record is remarkable, and reports of adverse effects of any significance with the best-known drugs of this type are uncommon.
When problems do arise they usually reflect either interactions, which with caution could have been avoided, or relative overdosage. In the course of time the recommended antihypertensive doses of diuretics have been reduced, and some adverse effects that were noted in the early years are now of less significance; these include hypotension, dehydration, reduction of the glomerular filtration rate, and severe hypokalemia. Continued use of thiazides in excessive doses may reflect ignorance of their very flat dose–response curve [ ]. At currently recommended low doses, diuretics improve overall quality of life, even in asymptomatic patients with mild hypertension [ ]. The large HANE study [ ] provided no evidence of superior efficacy or tolerability of new classes of antihypertensive drugs.
The popularity of thiazide diuretics in the management of hypertension reflects three major factors [ ]:
recognition of the effectiveness of much lower dosages than those used previously, thereby providing good antihypertensive efficacy with fewer adverse effects;
the excellent reductions in morbidity and mortality that have been achieved by low-dosage diuretic-based therapy in multiple randomized, controlled trials;
the increasing awareness that some diuretic-induced shrinkage of effective blood volume is essential for adequate treatment of most patients with hypertension.
The Seventh Joint Committee Report on Detection, Evaluation, and Treatment of High Blood Pressure [ ] concluded that a diuretic should be the first-step drug of choice, unless there are specific indications for other drugs. Although there may be theoretical advantages of certain newer types of drugs, the data thus far have not consistently shown that these drugs are more effective in reducing morbidity and mortality than therapy based on diuretics or beta-blockers [ ]. Emphasis is correctly placed on the important role of ACE inhibitors in retarding progression of renal insufficiency in diabetic and other nephropathies [ ]. However, in these circumstances, ACE inhibitors are added to a background of other antihypertensive therapies, commonly including a diuretic. Therefore, the renal protective action of ACE inhibitors is in the context of combination regimens. The ability of low doses of diuretics to enhance efficacy has been demonstrated for all other classes of drugs [ ]. Moreover, the tendency for increased retention of sodium by the hypertensive kidney when non-diuretic drugs cause the blood pressure to fall has long been recognized to contribute to loss of antihypertensive efficacy, which can be restored immediately by the addition of a diuretic.
The LIVE (Left ventricular regression, Indapamide Versus Enalapril) study was a 1-year, prospective, randomized, double-blind comparison of modified-release indapamide 1.5 mg and enalapril 20 mg in reducing left ventricular mass in 411 hypertensive patients with left ventricular hypertrophy [ ]. For equivalent reductions in blood pressure, indapamide was significantly more effective than enalapril in reducing left ventricular mass index.
The effectiveness of specific first-line antihypertensive drugs in lowering blood pressure and preventing adverse outcomes has been systematically quantified in a meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials that lasted at least 1 year, and compared one of six possible first-line antihypertensive therapies either with another of the six drug therapies or with no treatment [ ]. Of 38 trials identified, 23 in 50 853 patients met the inclusion criteria. Four drug classes were evaluated: thiazides (21 trials), beta-blockers (5 trials), calcium antagonists (4 trials), and ACE inhibitors (1 trial). In five comparisons of thiazides with beta-blockers, thiazides were associated with a significantly lower rate of withdrawal because of adverse effects (RR = 0.69; 95% CI = 0.63, 0.76). In the trials that had an untreated control group, low-dose thiazide therapy was associated with a significant reduction in the risk of death (RR = 0.89; CI = 0.81, 0.99), stroke (RR = 0.66; CI = 0.56, 0.79), coronary heart disease (RR = 0.71, CI = 0.60, 0.84), and cardiovascular events (RR = 0.68; CI = 0.62, 0.75). Low-dose thiazide therapy reduced the absolute risk of cardiovascular events by 5.7% (CI = 4.2, 7.2); the number needed to treat (NNT) for approximately 5 years to prevent one event was 18. High-dose thiazide, beta-blocker, and calcium antagonist therapy did not significantly reduce the risk of death or coronary heart disease. Thiazides were significantly better than the other drugs in reducing systolic pressure, but antihypertensive efficacy did not differ between the high- and low-dose thiazide trials.
In the UK Medical Research Council (MRC) trial, the outcome of antihypertensive treatment based on diuretics was compared with placebo in a very large number of hypertensive subjects [ ]. Treatment based on a thiazide did not increase the incidence of coronary events or sudden death; indeed, thiazide-based treatment reduced the incidence of strokes by 67% and of all cardiovascular complications by 20%. It should be noted that the dose of bendroflumethiazide used in the MRC trial (10 mg/day) is now known to be unnecessarily high and that it was used without prophylaxis against hypokalemia. Even so, a subgroup analysis of data from the MRC Trial provided no evidence that the association between major electrocardiographic abnormalities and an increased likelihood of a clinical event was strengthened by bendroflumethiazide treatment [ ].
A series of trials in elderly hypertensive subjects has shown a very pronounced reduction in cardiac events as a result of treatment based on thiazide diuretics. In the European Working Party on Hypertension in the Elderly (EWPHE) trial [ ], total cardiovascular deaths were reduced by 38%, all cardiac deaths by 43%, and deaths due to myocardial infarction by 60%. Benefits in the Systolic Hypertension in the Elderly Program (SHEP) included a reduction in fatal and non-fatal myocardial infarction of 25% and major cardiovascular events of 32% [ ] and were seen in those with and without electrocardiographic abnormalities at entry. The risk of heart failure was also reduced in patients taking chlortalidone-based therapy [ ]. Relative risk was similar in patients with and without non-insulin dependent diabetes mellitus; absolute risk reduction was twice as great in the diabetic subjects [ ]. The Swedish Trial of Old Patients with Hypertension (STOP-Hypertension) reported a significant reduction in myocardial infarction and all-cause mortality [ ]. In the MRC Trial in elderly adults [ ], diuretic treatment reduced coronary events by 44% and fatal cardiovascular events by 35%.
In the MRC trials [ , ], the IPPPSH trial [ ], and the HAPPHY trial [ ], antihypertensive treatment based on a thiazide diuretic was compared with treatment based on a beta-blocker. The results with diuretic treatment were no less favorable as regards cardiac events than those when using a “cardioprotective” beta-blocker [ ]. In the IPPPSH trial, the group using no beta-blockers (but with a higher incidence of diuretic use and of hypokalemia) showed no excess of cardiac events, even in patients who had an abnormal electrocardiogram when they entered the study. The MRC trial in elderly adults [ ] showed a significantly lower risk of cardiovascular events with the diuretic compared with the beta-blocker, raising the possibility that diuretics confer benefit through a mechanism other than the reduction of blood pressure.
In the MAPHY study [ ], total mortality was significantly lower for metoprolol than for thiazide, because of fewer deaths from coronary heart disease and stroke. However, the MAPHY study population comprised a subgroup of about half of the patients from the HAPPHY trial followed for an extended period. The difference in mortality between metoprolol and diuretics did not emerge during this extended follow-up, but was present during the first period of observation (that is during the HAPPHY trial), when there was no overall difference between beta-blockers and thiazides. Therefore, patients treated with atenolol in the HAPPHY trial must have fared worse than those treated with thiazides and much worse than those treated with metoprolol. Since there was no prior hypothesis for a difference between atenolol and metoprolol (and no plausible explanation for it), it seems reasonable to conclude that the apparent advantage of metoprolol was a chance finding produced by post-hoc subgroup analysis. The MAPHY study should be interpreted with extreme caution.
A review of the large trials has shown that the reduction in the incidence of events with usual thiazide-based treatment is 16% (95% CI = 8%, 23%) against the prediction from epidemiological studies of 20–25% [ ]. This shortfall in benefit could easily be due to chance.
In the Antihypertensive and Lipid-Lowering Treatment to Prevent Heart Attack Trial (ALLHAT), over 40 000 participants aged 55 years or older with hypertension and at least one other risk factor for coronary heart disease were randomized to chlortalidone, amlodipine, doxazosin, or lisinopril [ , ]. Doxazosin was discontinued prematurely because chlortalidone was clearly superior in preventing cardiovascular events, particularly heart failure [ ]. Otherwise, mean follow-up was 4.9 years. There were no differences between chlortalidone, amlodipine, and lisinopril in the primary combined outcome or all-cause mortality. Compared with chlortalidone heart failure was more common with amlodipine and lisinopril, and chlortalidone was better than lisinopril at preventing stroke. The authors concluded that diuretics are superior to other antihypertensive drugs in preventing one or more major form of cardiovascular disease and are less expensive. They should therefore be used as the preferred first-step treatment of hypertension. Although the design, conduct, and analyses of ALLHAT can be criticized [ ], it was a huge, prospective, randomized study and its results suggest that diuretic-based therapy is unsurpassed in the management of hypertension.
The frequencies and the profile of adverse effects of five major classes of antihypertensive agents have been assessed in an unselected group of 2586 chronically drug-treated hypertensive patients [ ]. This was accompanied by a questionnaire-based survey among patients attending a general practitioner. The percentages of patients who reported adverse effects spontaneously, on general inquiry, and on specific questioning were 16%, 24%, and 62% respectively. The percentage of patients in whom discontinuation was due to adverse effects with diuretics was 2.8%. The authors did not find a significant effect of age on the pattern of adverse effects. Women reported more effects and effects that were less related to the pharmacological treatment.
Loop and thiazide diuretics have been the mainstay of treatment for symptomatic heart failure [ ], relieving symptoms and improving cardiovascular hemodynamics. However, despite their widespread use, they have not been shown to improve survival in patients with heart failure. As it is not feasible to conduct such a trial in patients with pulmonary edema due to heart failure, the place of diuretic therapy in the management of heart failure appears secure.
Although they are widely used in the management of heart failure, loop and thiazide diuretics have not been shown to prolong survival. However, spironolactone and eplerenone must be added to the list of medications that offer improved survival for patients with heart failure.
In the Randomized Aldactone Evaluation Study (RALES) in 1663 patients with New York Heart Association (NYHA) class III (70%) or IV (30%) symptoms and an ejection fraction less than 35%, the addition of spironolactone 25 mg/day to conventional treatment (an ACE inhibitor, a loop diuretic, in most cases digoxin, and in 11% a beta-blocker) for an average of 24 months lowered the risk of all-cause mortality by 30% (from 46% to 35%), death from progressive heart failure, and sudden death [ ]. There were similar reductions in hospital admissions for worsening heart failure and for all cardiac causes. The magnitude of the overall effect was similar and additional to the proven benefit from ACE inhibition in severe heart failure.
In the Eplerenone Post-Acute Myocardial Infarction Heart Failure Efficacy and Survival Study (EPHESUS), in 6632 patients with an acute myocardial infarction complicated by left ventricular dysfunction and heart failure, the addition of eplerenone 25–50 mg/day to optimal medical therapy significantly reduced all-cause mortality by 15% and cardiovascular mortality by 17% over a mean follow-up period of 16 months; hospitalization rates were also reduced [ ].
Several mechanisms have been postulated to underlie the benefits of aldosterone receptor antagonists in heart failure [ ]. Aldosterone-induced cardiac fibrosis may reduce systolic function, impair diastolic function, and promote intracardiac conduction defects, with the potential for serious dysrhythmias. Aldosterone may also increase vulnerability to serious dysrhythmias by other mechanisms. The diuretic and hemodynamic effects of spironolactone in RALES and EPHESUS were subtle, and there were no significant changes in body weight, sodium retention, or systemic blood pressure.
The safe and effective dose of spironolactone remains uncertain [ ]. Pilot data from RALES showed that the frequency of hyperkalemia and uremia increased with doses of spironolactone above 50 mg/day [ ]. Doses up to 50 mg/day are appropriate, with adequate monitoring of serum electrolytes and renal function. The optimum strategy in the face of hyperkalemia, uremia, or symptomatic hypotension (reduction in frequency of spironolactone to alternate-day dosing, reduction in dose of ACE inhibitor, and/or increased dose of loop diuretics) is unclear, and how frequent such dose adjustments were necessary in RALES was not stated [ ].
The only frequent adverse reactions were gynecomastia, breast pain, or both in 10% of men. The rate of discontinuation because of these events was 2%. The risk of gynecomastia should not be an argument against the use of spironolactone in men with severe heart failure, since it reduces both morbidity and death.
At the dose of spironolactone used in RALES [ ], there was serious hyperkalemia, defined as a serum potassium concentration over 6.0 mmol/l, in 2% (compared with 1% of controls) and uremia was rare. However, a serum potassium concentration over 5 mmol/l and a serum creatinine concentration over 220 μmol/l were exclusion criteria. Although 29% of patients in the spironolactone group used potassium supplements, the benefit of spironolactone in these patients was similar to that in patients who did not.
In EPHESUS, as in RALES, the exclusion criteria included a serum potassium concentration over 5 mmol/l and a serum creatinine concentration over 220 μmol/l. There was serious hyperkalemia (a serum potassium concentration of 6.0 mmol/l or over) in 5.5% of those who took eplerenone and in 3.9% of those who took placebo. In each treatment group the incidence of hyperkalemia was higher among patients with the lowest baseline creatinine clearances.
About 84% of the patients in the Reduction of Endpoints in NIDDM with the Angiotensin II Antagonist Losartan Study (RENAAL) required diuretic therapy to effect blood pressure control [ ]. Although not specifically reported, a similarly high proportion of patients were likely to have required diuretic therapy to reach the target blood pressure in the Irbesartan Diabetic Nephropathy Trial (IDNT) [ ]. These studies remind us once again of the importance of targeting volume control in order to reduce blood pressure in patients with chronic renal insufficiency.
In a cohort study of 552 patients with acute renal insufficiency studied from 1989 to 1995 diuretic use was associated with a significant increase in the risk of death or non-recovery of renal function [ ]. This increased risk was largely borne by patients who were relatively unresponsive to diuretics. Although this study was observational, which prohibits causal inference, it is unlikely that diuretics afford any material benefit in the setting of acute renal insufficiency.
Various factors influence the choice of a diuretic in patients with renal insufficiency. First, it is widely believed that thiazide diuretics are ineffective once renal function falls below a creatinine clearance of 40–50 ml/minute. Diuretics need to enter the renal tubule to reach their luminal sites of action. In renal insufficiency, higher diuretic doses are required to overcome disease-related impediments to drug delivery to their sites of action. In the case of the loop diuretics the common practice is to titrate the dose of the diuretic until the desired response occurs [ ]. No such titration generally occurs with thiazide-type diuretics; consequently they are likely to fail, although for no reason other than their not being titrated to a truly effective dose. The true basis for “failure” of thiazide-type diuretics in patients with renal insufficiency resides in the fact that these diuretics are not of sufficient maximal efficacy to produce adequate volume control in these typically volume-expanded patients [ ].
However, resistance to loop diuretics can occur by various mechanisms [ ]. These include poor adherence to therapy, poor absorption, progressive worsening of heart failure, excess volume loss, renal insufficiency, secondary hyperaldosteronism, and hypertrophy of the tubular cells of the distal nephron. Resistance due to inadequate drug absorption—either its speed or extent—is common with furosemide, which is poorly absorbed [ ]. Once recognized, this hurdle to response can be overcome by using loop diuretics that are predictably well absorbed, such as bumetanide and torasemide or by giving intravenous furosemide [ ].
If loop diuretics fail to produce the desired diuretic response, combination diuretic therapy can be considered by adding a thiazide or a thiazide-like diuretic, such as metolazone. Such combinations are generally quite successful in both advanced congestive heart failure and late-stage chronic renal insufficiency, although excessive diuresis is a constant risk with such combinations. An excess diuresis with combination loop plus thiazide diuretic therapy is best managed by temporarily withdrawing both diuretics. Generally, diuretic doses are reduced when therapy is resumed [ ].
An alternative in the diuretic-resistant patient is the use of continuous infusions of loop diuretics rather than bolus diuretic therapy. Such infusions can also be given with a small volume of hypertonic saline, with good effect [ ]. The reasons why continuous infusions of loop diuretics work when bolus doses have failed may relate to a more efficient time-course of diuretic delivery and/or less activation of the renin–angiotensin system [ ]. Furosemide and torasemide may be the safest loop diuretics to be given as infusions, in that infusion of bumetanide has been associated with severe musculoskeletal symptoms [ ].
The importance of volume control in patients with renal insufficiency extends beyond its effect on blood pressure. Accordingly, the addition of hydrochlorothiazide can overcome the blunting by a high sodium intake of the therapeutic efficacy of ACE inhibition on proteinuria [ ]. This presumably relates to volume-related activation of the renin–angiotensin system.
Finally, loop diuretics reduce the metabolic demand of tubular cells, reducing oxygen requirements and thereby, in theory, increasing resistance to ischemic insults and perhaps other toxic circumstances. This property has been advanced as the basis for using diuretics in acute renal insufficiency. Although an attractive hypothesis to date, there is no compelling evidence to suggest any benefit from loop diuretics in established acute renal insufficiency. Alternatively, loop diuretics can convert oliguric to non-oliguric acute renal insufficiency, thereby easing the fluid restriction that would otherwise be necessary in such patients [ ].
It is no longer appropriate to consider the endocrine or paracrine properties of aldosterone as being restricted to the classical target cells. Hemodynamic and humoral actions of aldosterone have important clinical implications for the pathogenesis of progressive renal disease, and may therefore affect future antihypertensive strategies. Initially, one might anticipate that the adverse effects of aldosterone could be attenuated merely by blocking aldosterone release with either an ACE inhibitor or angiotensin-II receptor antagonists. However, this appears not to be the case. Several investigators have now shown that ACE inhibitors acutely reduce aldosterone concentrations, but that with continued use this suppression fades. Thus, the presumption that ACE inhibitors would suppress the production of both aldosterone and angiotensin-II was incorrect. So, although ACE inhibitors and angiotensin-II receptor antagonists are individually very effective in retarding disease progression, additional benefit may be realized with a concurrent aldosterone receptor antagonist. As observed in clinical studies of congestive heart failure, as well as in animals with renal disease, antagonism of aldosterone receptors protects against end-organ damage through a combination of both hemodynamic and direct cellular actions [ ].
An important consideration regarding the feasibility of aldosterone receptor antagonist therapy in chronic renal insufficiency is the risk of provoking hyperkalemia. Many patients with chronic renal insufficiency are already taking an ACE inhibitor or an angiotensin-II receptor antagonist, with the attendant risk of hyperkalemia. Despite such concerns, the results of the RALES and EPHESUS trials have been reassuring [ ]. In those studies, patients taking an ACE inhibitor who were randomized to spironolactone or eplerenone 25–50 mg/day had only small increases in potassium concentrations. Although the differences between those who took aldosterone receptor antagonists and those who took placebo were statistically significant, the mean increases were not clinically important, and serious hyperkalemia was uncommon. However, in clinical practice the risk of hyperkalemia may be greater [ ], and close laboratory monitoring and judicious use of these drugs is necessary to minimize the risk.
Although it is an effective aldosterone receptor antagonist, spironolactone is limited by its tendency to cause undesirable sexual adverse effects. At standard doses, impotence and gynecomastia can occur in men, and premenopausal women can have menstrual disturbances. These adverse effects, caused by the binding of spironolactone to progesterone and androgen receptors, are substantial causes of drug withdrawal. In the RALES study there was a 10% incidence of gynecomastia or breast pain in men, compared with 1% with placebo, and significantly more patients discontinued treatment (2% versus 0.2%). Although troublesome, these adverse effects are reversible and dose-related. The advent of selective aldosterone receptor antagonists, such as eplerenone, should reduce these adverse effects and thereby improve patient compliance. In EPHESUS there was no increase in the incidence of gynecomastia, breast pain, or impotence in men or menstrual irregularities in women who took eplerenone.
Changes in potassium metabolism supposedly cause electrical instability in the heart, cardiac dysrhythmias, and increased mortality; replacement of potassium has been said to eliminate the risk of dysrhythmias [ ]. Mild hypokalemia might be expected to cause dysrhythmias in patients with serious organic heart disease (cardiomegaly, an abnormal electrocardiogram, frequent ventricular extra beats before treatment). However, the evidence suggests that hypokalemia after myocardial infarction is not the cause of dysrhythmias, but that both are the result of excess catecholamines. Furthermore, although hypertensive patients with left ventricular hypertrophy have an increased frequency of ventricular dysrhythmias, extra beats do not increase in frequency during diuretic treatment, even in the face of profound hypokalemia [ ].
Early evidence linking thiazide-induced hypokalemia with dysrhythmias and sudden death was indirect and tenuous at best [ , ]. One study suggested that diuretics are not responsible for the relation between hypokalemia and ventricular fibrillation in acute myocardial infarction [ ]. Chronic preoperative hypokalemia due to diuretics was not a risk factor for intraoperative dysrhythmias [ ]. Two large studies using 24-hour electrocardiographic monitoring failed to show a relation between diuretic-induced hypokalemia and ventricular dysrhythmias [ , ].
However, a retrospective analysis of 6797 patients with ejection fractions below 0.36 enrolled in the Studies Of Left Ventricular Dysfunction (SOLVD) was conducted to assess the relation between diuretic use at baseline and the subsequent risk of dysrhythmic death [ ]. Patients who were taking a diuretic at baseline (n = 2901) were significantly more likely to have such an event than those not taking a diuretic (n = 2896): 3.1 versus 1.7 per 1000 person-years. On univariate analysis and after controlling for important co-variates, the relation remained significant (relative risks 1.85 and 1.37 respectively). However, the association was seen only with non-potassium-sparing diuretics (n = 2495; relative risk 1.33); for potassium-sparing diuretics, alone or in combination with a non-potassium-sparing diuretic (n = 406), the relative risk was 0.90.
These data suggest that diuretic-induced potassium disturbances can cause fatal dysrhythmias in patients with left ventricular systolic dysfunction. SOLVD were not randomized trials of the risk of dysrhythmic death caused by diuretics. On average, patients retaking diuretics not only had lower serum potassium concentrations, but were also older, had more severe heart failure and were more likely to be taking antidysrhythmic drugs at baseline, although they had fewer indicators of ischemic heart disease. Even controlling for bias in multivariate analysis does not exclude the influence of unrecognized confounders. It is unknown whether diuretics were continued or changed during the 3 years of the trial. Thus, it remains uncertain that diuretic therapy is related to a risk of sudden dysrhythmic death in patients with heart failure.
Diuretic-induced hypokalemia is undoubtedly associated with a risk of serious ventricular dysrhythmias if diuretics are co-administered with drugs that prolong the QT interval [ ]. Diuretics increase the risk of torsade de pointes during antidysrhythmic drug therapy, independent of serum potassium concentration [ ]. The list of cardiac and non-cardiac drugs that prolong the QT interval continues to lengthen [ ]. It includes various antidysrhythmic drugs, including ibutilide, almokalant, and dofetilide; antimicrobial drugs, including clarithromycin, clindamycin, co-trimoxazole, pentamidine, imidazoles (such as ketoconazole), some fluoroquinolones, and antimalarial drugs (quinine, halofantrine); histamine H1 receptor antagonists (terfenadine and astemizole); the antidepressant zimeldine; antipsychotic drugs (pimozide and sertindole); tricyclic/tetracyclic antidepressants; and cisapride. Particular care should be taken to avoid diuretic-induced hypokalemia when any of these agents is co-prescribed.
There is no valid evidence that diuretics contribute to myocardial infarction, sudden death, or a failure of antihypertensive treatment or other risk factor interventions to prevent coronary deaths [ ]. An association between diuretics and sudden death has been suggested only in selected subset analyses, which allow no valid conclusions. Even in subjects with electrocardiographic abnormalities before treatment, there is no sound or consistent evidence to support the suggestion that diuretics predispose to sudden death.
Two retrospective case-control studies have reported an increased risk of cardiac arrest in hypertensive patients treated with thiazide-type diuretics [ , ]. The risk was less among those treated with low-dose thiazides (equivalent to hydrochlorothiazide 25 mg/day) or with thiazides plus potassium-sparing drugs. The case-control design lacks one of the major advantages of randomized clinical trials, a tendency to equalize unknown, but important, differences between the comparison groups. Underadjustment is usual in case-control studies; for example, patients with more severe hypertension were more likely to have been treated with higher doses and less likely to have received potassium-sparing drugs because of renal dysfunction. Failure to randomize treatment tends to exaggerate differences between groups. Data from the prospective observational Gothenburg study suggested that metabolic changes during long-term treatment with antihypertensive drugs (predominantly beta-blockers and thiazides) are not associated with increased risk of coronary heart disease [ ].
In 1077 patients with intraocular pressures of 22–29 mmHg, normal visual fields, and normal optic discs, who were followed every 6 months for 5 years in the European Glaucoma Prevention Study, a multivariate analysis showed that the use of diuretics (HR = 2.41, 95% CI = 1.12, 5.19) was one of several factors associated with the development of open-angle glaucoma [ ]. Systemic hypertension was not associated with the conversion to open-angle glaucoma. Information concerning the use of any medications was obtained at baseline and every 6 months throughout the study. However, particular classes of diuretics were not separately cited. This contributory effect of diuretics may be explained by the play of chance alone or by as yet unknown detrimental effects of diuretics on the retinal ganglion cells. A possible reduction in ocular perfusion pressure induced by a diuretic-related reduction in systemic pressure may be an additional mechanism. In this study, diuretics were more often used in combination with other antihypertensive drugs, particularly in the patients who developed open-angle glaucoma. Blood pressure readings were not obtained during the study, and so it could not be determined whether there was hypotension.
Sensorineural hearing loss is an important adverse outcome in survivors of neonatal intensive care illnesses, particularly those with persistent pulmonary hypertension of the newborn. The relations between ototoxic drugs and 4-year sensorineural hearing loss have been assessed in a prospective, longitudinal outcome study in near-term and term survivors of severe neonatal respiratory failure who were enrolled in the Canadian arm of the Neonatal Inhaled Nitric Oxide Study [ ]. A combination of loop diuretic use for more than 14 days and an average dose of neuromuscular blocker greater than 0.96 mg/kg/day contributed to sensorineural hearing loss among survivors (OR = 5.2; 95% CI = 1.6, 17). Cumulative dose and duration of diuretic use and overlap of diuretic use with neuromuscular blockers, aminoglycosides, and vancomycin were individually linked to sensorineural hearing loss. These studies implicate loop diuretics and neuromuscular blockers individually and possibly synergistically in sensorineural hearing loss.
Despite their safety record, speculation persists that the metabolic effects of long-term diuretic treatment predispose to myocardial infarction or sudden death, and that diuretic treatment may therefore be hazardous. It is worth noting that much of this speculation is found outside the columns of the legitimate medical press [ ]. The supposed risks of diuretics are broadcast in countless symposium proceedings, monographs, and such like, sponsored by pharmaceutical companies with a vested interest in diverting prescriptions from diuretics to other drugs. Needless to say, these publications do not present a balanced view. Studies of dubious quality are published repeatedly without ever appearing in refereed journals, and eventually come to be cited in independent reviews and articles. There can be no doubt that these publications have a large impact on prescribing practices.
It is relatively easy to foster these concerns, particularly since antihypertensive therapy would be expected to prevent myocardial infarction and sudden death, but in selected studies does not appear to do so. To explain this, it is suggested that the beneficial effects of lowering blood pressure are offset in part by adverse effects related to thiazide-induced biochemical disturbances. Hypokalemia and hypomagnesemia might, for example, be dysrhythmogenic and cause sudden death; or hyperlipidemia and impaired glucose tolerance might be atherogenic and promote myocardial infarction. Some authors have suggested that thiazides should certainly be avoided in left ventricular hypertrophy and coronary heart disease, because of an increased risk of ventricular extra beats [ , ], and that diuretics are not appropriate options in those who already have hyperglycemia, hyperuricemia, or hyperlipidemia [ ]. The argument has been taken ad absurdum by a suggestion that the use of diuretics as first-line treatment of hypertension is illogical [ ]. Others have argued effectively that we should not be impressed by such speculations and that treatment should be based on long-term experience [ ].
There is little doubt that high dosages of diuretics carry an appreciable risk of impairing diabetic control in patients with established diabetes mellitus. However, their role in causing de novo glucose intolerance is not clear [ ]. Long-acting diuretics are more likely to alter glucose metabolism. Impaired glucose tolerance is a relatively rare complication with loop diuretics, although isolated cases of non-ketotic hyperglycemia in diabetics have been described [ ].
The effects of thiazide-type diuretics on carbohydrate tolerance cannot be ignored [ ]. There is a definite relation between diuretic treatment, impaired glucose tolerance, and biochemical diabetes, and a possible relation with insulin resistance [ ]. It is well established that the effect of thiazides on blood glucose is dose-related, probably linearly, while the antihypertensive effect has little relation to dose [ ]. There is relatively little information on the time-course; numerous short-term studies have shown that the blood glucose concentration increases in 4–8 weeks [ ]. The evidence that current low dosages impair glucose tolerance in the long term is not entirely consistent, perhaps because of differences between studies in dosages, diuretics used, durations of treatment, and types of patient [ , ]. In SHEP, low-dosage chlortalidone in elderly patients for 3 years resulted in a non-significant excess of diabetes (8.6% versus 7.5%) compared with placebo [ ]. The apparent differences between diuretics may be due to comparisons of dosages that are not equivalent [ ]. Important differences between individual diuretics will be established only when their complete dose–response relations for metabolic variables and blood pressure have been defined [ ].
In contrast to the wealth of evidence on impaired glucose tolerance in diabetics, sound clinical trials of the effect on insulin resistance are difficult to find, considering the amount of comment and speculation on the topic [ , ]. It is not known whether insulin resistance is completely or even partly responsible for the changes in glucose tolerance that occur during long-term thiazide treatment; impaired insulin secretion may also have a role [ ]. Hypokalemia or potassium depletion may contribute to impaired glucose tolerance, by inhibiting insulin secretion rather than by causing insulin resistance, but is not the only or even the main cause of impaired glucose tolerance during long-term diuretic treatment [ , ]. The routine use of potassium-sparing diuretics with relatively low dosages of thiazides does not prevent impaired glucose tolerance.
Diuretics worsen metabolic control in established diabetes, but it is not known whether this adversely affects prognosis [ ]. Disturbances of carbohydrate homeostasis have been detected by detailed biochemical testing, but their clinical importance is uncertain [ ]. The major clinical trials have not shown a major risk of diabetes mellitus. The incidence of diabetes mellitus in diuretic-treated subjects is only about 1%, even when large dosages are used [ ]. In ALLHAT, among patients classified as non-diabetic at baseline, the incidence of diabetes after more than 4 years was 12% with chlortalidone compared with 9.8% (amlodipine) and 8.1% (lisinopril). Despite these trends, there was no excess of cardiovascular events or mortality from chlortalidone in the entire population or among patients with diabetes. Although these data are reassuring, observational data suggest that diuretic-induced new-onset diabetes carries an increased risk of cardiovascular morbidity and mortality, but that this may take 10–15 years to become fully apparent [ ].
Since changes in glucose balance after diuretics tend to be reversible on withdrawal, measures of carbohydrate homeostasis should be assessed after several months of thiazide treatment to detect those few patients who experience significant glucose intolerance [ ]. With this approach, the small risk of diabetes mellitus secondary to diuretic therapy can be minimized.
Most diuretics cause hyperuricemia. Increased reabsorption of uric acid (along with other solutes) in the proximal tubule as a consequence of volume depletion is one reason; however, diuretics also compete with uric acid for excretory transport mechanisms. There is a small increased risk of acute gout in susceptible subjects [ ]. In the large outcome trials, about 3–5% of subjects treated with diuretics for hypertension developed clinical gout [ ]. In those with acute gout during diuretic treatment, attacks were more strongly related to loop diuretics than to thiazides [ ]. Gout was significantly associated with obesity and a high alcohol intake in the subgroup taking only a thiazide diuretic. About 40% of cases of acute gout may have been prevented by avoiding thiazides in those 20% of men who weighed over 90 kg and/or who consumed more than 56 units of alcohol per week.
Well-conducted studies have shown that diuretic-induced changes in serum uric acid are dose-related [ , ]. In low-dosage regimens, as currently recommended, alterations are minor, and other than the risk of gout the long-term consequences of an increased serum uric acid are unknown.
The issues of whether hyperuricemia is an independent risk factor for cardiovascular disease and the clinical relevance of the rise in serum uric acid caused by diuretic treatment are controversial [ ]. In the Systolic Hypertension in the Elderly Program (SHEP), diuretic-based treatment in 4327 men and women, aged 60 years or more, with isolated systolic hypertension was associated with significant reduction in cardiovascular events [ ]. Serum uric acid independently predicted cardiovascular events in these patients. The benefit of active treatment was not affected by baseline serum uric acid. After randomization, however, an increase in serum uric acid of less than 0.06 mmol/l (median change) in the active treatment group was associated with a hazard ratio (HR) of 0.58 (CI = 0.37, 0.92) for coronary heart disease compared with those whose serum uric acid rose by 0.6 mmol/l or more. This was despite a slight but significantly greater reduction in both systolic and diastolic blood pressures in the latter. Those with serum uric acid increases of 0.6 mmol/l or more in the active group had a similar risk of coronary events as those in the placebo group.
This analysis of the SHEP database confirms the findings of a systematic worksite hypertension program [ ]. In 7978 treated patients with mild to moderate hypertension, cardiovascular disease was significantly associated with serum uric acid (HR = 1.22; CI = 1.11, 1.35), controlling for known cardiovascular risk factors. The cardioprotective effect of diuretics increased from 31% to 38% after adjustment for serum uric acid.
These observations suggest that persistent elevation of serum uric acid during diuretic-based antihypertensive therapy may detract from the benefit of blood pressure reduction. However, the relation between serum uric acid and cardiovascular disease was independent of the effects of diuretics. Furthermore, low-dose thiazide regimens have a smaller impact on serum uric acid [ ].
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