Table 3.
Study Design | Findings | Measurement | Limitations | Timolol Concentration | Challenge-Rechallenge | Level of evidence52 | Grade of evidence53 | Year | Ref |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Case series | 17/165 had CNS side effects, 6/17 discontinued medication | Active reporting on follow-up | Not confirmatory | 0.25%,0.5% | No | V | Low | 1979 | 28 |
Case series | 79/547 side effect entries were CNS | Passive registry reporting | Based on reporting only | Not stated | No | V | Low | 1980 | 44 |
Case series | 18/489 consecutively treated patients had follow-up CNS side effects | Active patient | Not confirmatory | 0.5% | No | V | Low | 1980 | 15 |
Case series | Wide range of CNS complaints | Passive registry reporting | Based on reporting only | Not stated | No | V | Low | 1983 | 4 |
Case series | Wide range of CNS complaints | Passive registry reporting | Based on reporting only | Not stated | No | V | Low | 1987 | 42 |
Crossover | 16/18 CNS events improved with change to betaxolol | Patients with timolol side effects entered | Small numbers | 0.5% | No | IV | Low | 1988 | 26 |
Double-blind | 5/8 CNS events improved with change to betaxolol | Patients with timolol side effects entered | Small numbers | 0.5% | No | II | Moderate | 1988 | 26 |
Case series | 7/40 headache, 6/40 dizziness, 2/40 depression, 2/40 nightmares, 2/40 memory loss | Observational | Small numbers, no statistics | Not stated | Few | IV | Low | 1989 | 24 |
Double-blind, pilot study | More side effects with timolol than betaxolol | Several test batteries | No statistics | Not stated | No | II | Low | 1989 | 27 |
Double-blind, cross | Higher depression scores in timolol group versus betaxolol | Beck and Zung-Conde inventories | No controls | 0.5% | Few | II | Moderate | 1992 | 25 |
Random, double-blind, multi-center | 0/50 with timolol treatment had CNS events; depression and somatization scores not changed before and after treatment | Psychological checklist (SLL-90-R) | Small numbers | 0.5% | No | II | Moderate | 1999 | 47 |
Cohort studies | No association of beta-blocker and depression | Self-survey questionnaires | Small numbers | Not stated | No | III | Low | 2002 | 48 |
Case-control | 9.2% of those on timolol had positive scores for major depression; approx. five times more depression than control group | Self-given questionnaires | No control matching | Variable | No | III | Moderate | 2011 | 49 |
Cohort studies | Increased risk of starting antidepressants after topical timolol use | Adjusted sequence ratio | Retrospective | Not stated | No | III | Moderate | 2012 | 50 |
Random, double-blind, multi-center | 3.8% of those on timolol had nervous system disorders | Patient reporting | Prospective but no controls | 0.5% | No | III | Moderate | 2018 | 51 |
[Level of evidence52 is considered in five categories: Level I – large randomized trials with clear-cut results, Level II – small randomized trials with uncertain results, Level III – nonrandomized, contemporaneous controls, Level IV – nonrandomized, historical controls, Level V – no control, case-series only] [Grade of evidence53 is defined in four categories: High – further research is unlikely to change our confidence in the estimate of effect, Moderate – further research is likely to have an important impact on our confidence in the estimate of effect and may change the estimate, Low – further research is very likely to have an important impact on our confidence in the estimate of effect and is likely to change the estimate, Very Low – any estimate of effect is very uncertain]