Diuretics reduce risk of
death from congestive heart failure
By Lise Millay Stevens, Contributing Writer
Health Behavior News Service
Diuretics reduce the risk of death, delay heart
deterioration and improve exercise capacity in patients
with congestive heart failure, a new review of studies
shows.
Although widely used for quick relief of CHF symptoms —
cough, shortness of breath and swelling in the feet,
legs and ankles — up until now it was not known whether
diuretics had a more substantial effect in treating CHF.
“The available data from several small trials show that
in patients with chronic heart failure, conventional
diuretics appear to reduce the risk of death and
worsening heart failure compared to placebo,” according
to the review team led by Dr. Rajaa Faris of Saudi
Arabia.
Diuretics, which help the body get rid of excess fluid,
should be used in conjunction with other heart
medications in treating CHF, the reviewers said.
The review appears in the most recent issue of The
Cochrane Library, a publication of The Cochrane
Collaboration, an international organization that
evaluates medical research. Systematic reviews draw
evidence-based conclusions about medical practice after
considering both the content and quality of existing
medical trials on a topic.
The researchers looked at data from 525 patients from 14
randomized clinical trials — seven comparing diuretics
with placebo and seven comparing diuretics with other
heart medications in treating CHF. The studies involved
three types of diuretics: thiazide, potassium-sparing
and loop diuretics, such as Lasix.
Sixty-one percent of the participants were men with an
average age of 59.
The authors estimate that “80 deaths could be avoided
for every 1,000 patients treated” with diuretics for CHF,
but add that this evidence was based on only 15 deaths
out of 221 participants from the studies that reported
mortality rates.
CHF, also known as heart failure and cardiac failure,
involves a decrease in the heart’s ability to pump blood
efficiently through the body, leading to a lower
delivery of nutrients and oxygen to the cells and
causing symptoms such as fatigue, shortness of breath
and difficulty with even basic physical activity.
Five million Americans have CHF and 550,000 new cases
are diagnosed yearly, according to the American Heart
Association. There is no cure or surgical treatment for
the disorder and physicians rely on a variety of
medications to control symptoms and decrease damage to
the heart and other organs in the body while improving
patients’ quality of life.
But some doctors question whether the benefits of the
drugs outweigh the risks. Diuretics can have serious
side effects such as depleting electrolytes (potassium
and magnesium), which can contribute to irregular
heartbeat and kidney disorders.
“Diuretics are effective, easy to administer and
inexpensive,” said Clyde W. Yancy, M.D., with the
University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center in
Dallas. “Excessive use of diuretics provokes renal
[kidney] insufficiency. Importantly, changes in renal
function do impart an additional risk for patients with
heart failure.”
Proper dosing, Yancy said, is key. “The hope is that
physicians will use diuretics in a manner sufficient to
relieve evidence of congestion but not to the extent
that the risks of disturbance of electrolytes and renal
function occur.
“Few drugs are as immediately effective for heart
failure as diuretics,” Yancy added. “Any patient in whom
these drugs are prescribed should feel at ease with the
therapy, provided they are under the care of a team of
health care professionals who are actively evaluating
electrolyte balance and kidney function.”
The Cochrane reviewers say that many of the studies they
analyzed were small, with varying types and doses of
diuretics compared, and that further research is needed
to understand the optimal use and benefits of diuretic
treatment
A large, long-term study of diuretic treatment for older
adults with high blood pressure in a recent American
Journal of Cardiology found that although those on
the drug had a slightly higher risk of developing
diabetes, the death rate from heart attack or stroke was
significantly reduced.
# # #
Faris R, et al. Diuretics for heart failure (Review).
The Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews 2006, Issue
1.
The Cochrane Collaboration is an international
nonprofit, independent organization that produces and
disseminates systematic reviews of health care
interventions and promotes the search for evidence in
the form of clinical trials and other studies of
interventions. Visit http://www.cochrane.org for more
information.