COPD is usually caused by smoking, and symptoms include breathing
difficulty, cough, and wheezing. While some patients may use
short-acting inhalers to quickly relieve occasional shortness of
breath, people with more severe and persistent symptoms may be
prescribed long-acting inhalers to help expand the airways and keep
them open.
Compared to COPD patients who didn’t use long-acting
bronchodilators, those who did were 50 percent more likely have
cardiovascular problems like a heart attack or stroke within the
first 30 days of starting to use these inhalers, the study found.
The absolute risk of problems like stroke, heart attack, rhythm
disorders, and heart failure was still very low – around 1 percent –
and the increased risk associated with long-acting bronchodilators
disappeared over time, researchers report in JAMA Internal Medicine.
“Patients should know that their risk for cardiovascular diseases
will be increased after initiation of bronchodilators even though
the treatment is essential,” said Dr. Tadahiro Goto, a researcher at
Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston who wasn’t involved in the
study.
While patients shouldn’t stop using inhalers, they should be
vigilant about seeking medical attention for symptoms that might
indicate a heart problem, such as chest pains or a suddenly rapid
heart beat, Goto said by email.
To assess the connection between long-acting bronchodilators and
heart problems, researchers examined data on 284,220 adults with
COPD who had never used these medicines.
At the start of the study, patients were 71 years old on average,
and researchers followed them for an average of 2 years. During that
time, 37,719 people developed severe heart problems requiring
emergency medical care.
Researchers looked at long-acting bronchodilators in two different
families of medicines – beta-agonists and antimuscarinic antagonists
– and didn’t see a difference in the risk of heart disease based on
the type of drug or the dose.
The study wasn’t a controlled experiment designed to prove whether
or how long-acting bronchodilators might influence the odds of
severe heart problems in patients with COPD.
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While these medicines are designed to widen the airways, they may
also accelerate the heart rate, constrict blood vessels and increase
blood pressure, said lead study author Meng-Ting Wang, of the
National Defense Medical Center in Taipei, Taiwan.
Long-acting bronchodilators might also increase inflammation, which
then leads to blockage of the blood vessels, Wang said by email.
It’s also possible that heart problems that appear linked to the
medications in the study might have been there all along and
misdiagnosed in some patients, said Dr. Shawn Aaron, a researcher at
the University of Ottawa Medical School who wasn’t involved in the
study.
Patients should have a follow-up exam after they start using these
inhalers to make sure they’re not having symptoms that might be
caused by cardiovascular disease, Aaron advised.
“No one should avoid these drugs if they are prescribed by a
physician,” said Dr. Prescott Woodruff, a researcher at the
University of California San Francisco who wasn’t involved in the
study.
“They are very effective at improving lung function and reducing
exacerbations in COPD,” Woodruff said by email. “The initiation of
these drugs, in this instance, can simply be a marker for worsening
symptoms of COPD or cardiovascular disease that is mistaken for COPD.”
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/2A6F4NM JAMA Internal Medicine, online January
2, 2018.
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