Heartburn drugs tied to
greater mortality
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[July 06, 2017] By
Anne Harding
(Reuters Health) - Widely used heartburn
drugs are associated with increased risk of death, and the longer a
person uses the drugs, the greater the risk, new research suggests.
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Proton pump inhibitors or PPIs, have been tied to a wide range of
side effects including fractures, dementia, heart disease, pneumonia
and kidney disease, the study’s senior author Dr. Ziyad Al-Aly of
Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis told Reuters
Health in a telephone interview.
“We took it a bit further and asked is this class associated with a
higher risk of death, and the answer is yes,” he said.
About 50 million people in the U.S. are on PPIs, Al-Aly noted, and
there is strong evidence that the drugs are overused. Popular drugs
in this class include omeprazole (Prilosec), esomeprazole (Nexium)
and lansoprazole (Prevacid).
He and his colleagues looked at data on millions of U.S. military
veterans to determine if taking PPIs was associated with an
increased risk of dying during about six years of follow-up.
Their analysis included nearly 350,000 new users of PPIs or H2
blockers, another type of acid-suppressing drug. They also compared
PPI users and non-users within a group of nearly 3.3 million people,
and PPI versus no PPI and no H2 blockers among about 2.9 million
people.
New users of PPIs were 25 percent more likely to die during
follow-up than people who started taking H2 blockers, Al-Aly and his
colleagues report in BMJ Open.
For new PPI users, death risk rose in tandem with the amount of time
the person took the medication. Risk was also increased in people
who were on PPIs without an appropriate medical reason.
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The most likely explanation for the increased mortality risk is the
side effects associated with PPIs, Al-Aly said. In terms of the
mechanisms that could be involved, he added, laboratory experiments
have shown that lysosomes - tiny organs within cells that act like
garbage disposals to get rid of waste - don’t function well in
people taking PPIs. Other research has shown that PPIs may shorten
the protective chromosome ends known as telomeres, in effect
speeding up cell aging.
When a person has heartburn or reflux, he added, possible root
causes like obesity, poor diet or smoking should be addressed first.
“Any intake or use of PPIs should be under the watchful and vigilant
eye of a physician, for the smallest dose that’s effective and the
shortest period of time,” he said.
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/2sqKW1g BMJ Open, online July 4, 2017.
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