BACKGROUND
Hypotension is common during anaesthesia. Increasing number of studies have reported that remimazolam may be associated with lower incidence of intra-operative hypotension compared with other anaesthetics. However, the results remain controversial.
OBJECTIVE
This study aimed to evaluate the influence of remimazolam on intra-operative hypotension and its related outcomes (hypoxaemia, bradycardia and time to awake).
DESIGN
A systematic review of randomised controlled trials (RCTs) with meta-analyses
DATA SOURCES
PubMed, Cocharane and Embase databases were searched to identify eligible RCTs published up to June 2024.
ELIGIBILITY CRITERIA
RCTs published in English were eligible for inclusion. The study patients were 18 years or older who were administered with remimazolam and other positive control agents in either the pre-operative or intra-operative period. The incidence of intra-operative hypotension was identified in these studies.
RESULTS
This study evaluated 34 trials including 4847 individuals. Basing on moderate-certainty evidence, we found that remimazolam administration reduced the incidence of intra-operative hypotension [risk ratio (RR) = 0.48, 95% confidence interval (95% CI): 0.41 to 0.57] and bradycardia (16 studies, n = 2869, RR = 0.40, 95% CI: 0.29 to 0.54). No difference was observed in the incidence of hypoxaemia (RR = 0.70, 95% CI: 0.48 to 1.01) and time to awake (MD = −0.91, 95% CI: −2.42 to 0.60). The remarkable association between remimazolam and hypotension remained robust and significant, regardless of general anaesthesia or procedural sedation (P < 0.01, I
2
= 82%). No significant difference was found between different control drugs (P = 0.97, I
2
= 82%).
CONCLUSION
Moderate-quality evidence shows that remimazolam administration to patients undergoing general anaesthesia or procedural sedation decreases the incidence of intra-operative hypotension and bradycardia.