The pills were not tied to an increased risk of suicide, however.
The drugs finasteride and dutasteride belong to a class of
medications known as 5-alpha-reductase inhibitors (5ARIs). 5ARIs
have come under increasing scrutiny in recent years by regulators in
the United States and Canada because of a possible link to mental
health issues, according to the researchers.
"There wasn’t a lot of good studies in this area, and it’s a very
common medication for urologists to use," said lead author Dr.
Blayne Welk, of Western University and the Institute for Clinical
Evaluative Sciences in Ontario.
Welk's team analyzed data from 93,197 men who were at least 66 years
old when they received prescriptions for 5ARIs between 2003 and
2013, plus another 93,197 similar men who had never filled a
prescription for a 5ARI.
Overall, 5ARIs were not linked with an increased risk of suicide,
the researchers reported in JAMA Internal Medicine.
During the first 18 months, however, the men using 5ARIs had an 88
percent higher risk of harming themselves. That risk did not extend
beyond 18 months.
Men in the 5ARI group also had a 94 percent higher risk of
depression in the first 18 months, compared to men not using these
drugs. Beyond 18 months, the increased risk of depression fell to 22
percent.
The type of 5ARI did not appear to significantly alter the results.
Welk cautions that the actual risk of depression and self-harm is
very low.
If the drugs were actually causing these side effects - which this
study wasn't design to prove - "you'd need 470 men to take this
medication for a full year to have a new case of depression," Welk
told Reuters Health.
That number would have to be even higher to cause a new case of
self-harm, since self-harm is less common than depression.
"It is a risk potentially and patients and physicians should be
aware of it," Welk said.
A separate study in the journal PeerJ evaluated another concern
about 5ARIs - erectile dysfunction.
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Drs. Tina Kiguradze and William Temps of Northwestern University
Feinberg School of Medicine in Chicago and colleagues found that
when erectile dysfunction occurred in men taking 5ARIs for at least
180 days, the dysfunction was more likely to last at least 90 days
after stopping the medication. Erectile dysfunction, when it
occurred, resolved faster in men who took the medications for
shorter periods.
The proportion of men taking 5ARIs and experiencing erectile
dysfunction is likely around 5 percent, according to Dr. Landon
Trost, who is head of andrology and male infertility at the Mayo
Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota.
But it's not clear how many men suffer persistent erectile
dysfunction after stopping 5ARIs, said Trost, who was not involved
with either of the new studies.
"I think it’s important to be educated about the potential side
effects," he told Reuters Health.
Men who are already at increased risk for these potential side
effects must weigh the risks and benefits of the drugs, Trost said.
He said older men taking 5ARIs for prostate problems might come to
different conclusions than young men taking the pills for hair loss.
Additionally, he said, men should tell their doctors if they
experience these symptoms.
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/2ni6UUB and http://bit.ly/2ninIe3 JAMA
Internal Medicine, online March 20, 2017; http://bit.ly/2nZJOzi
PeerJ, online March 9, 2017
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