Oxytocin is routinely administered after delivery for prophylaxis and treatment of postpartum hemorrhage, but it is associated with considerable cardiovascular side-effects. Carbetocin, a synthetic oxytocin analogue, has a myometrial contraction effect of 60 min when given IV, compared with 16 min for oxytocin.
To investigate whether there are differences in cardiovascular effects between oxytocin and carbetocin up to 1 h after treatment.
Sixty-one healthy pregnant women undergoing elective cesarean section in spinal anesthesia were randomized to receive an IV bolus of either five units (8.3 µg) of oxytocin or 100 µg of carbetocin after delivery of the baby. Heart rate (HR), mean arterial blood pressure, ECG ST index, oxygen saturation (SaO), and photoplethysmographic digital pulse wave analysis variables were recorded before and at 1, 5, 20, and 60 min after drug administration. Vasopressor use, uterine tonus, total bleeding, and need for additional uterotonics were also assessed. Repeated measurement ANOVA was used for statistical analyses.
The drugs had equal vasodilatory and hypotensive effects. Oxytocin, but not carbetocin, caused a decrease in HR at 1 min and a sustained decrease in cardiac left ventricular ejection time. Aggregate vasopressor use was higher in the carbetocin group. Neither drug caused any change in ST index, SaO, or subjective cardiac symptoms. Uterine tonus, need for additional uterotonics, or total bleeding did not differ significantly between the groups.
Single doses of oxytocin and carbetocin had similar dilatory effects on vascular tonus, where the difference in aggregate vasopressor use can be attributed to a more persistent hypotensive effect of carbetocin. A transient negative chronotropic and sustained negative inotropic effect occurred after oxytocin. Neither drug showed any alarmingly adverse effects. Differences in drug effects may be attributed to differences in oxytocin and vasopressin receptor signaling pathways.