ANTIBIOTIC MIGHT RAISE HEART RISKS
Taking the widely used
antibiotic clarithromycin may boost some patients’ odds of dying from
heart-related causes, a new study suggests.
Because millions of
people receive this antibiotic each year, the findings require urgent
confirmation, said the Danish researchers behind the study. However, they
emphasized that the actual risk is small and that guidelines for the use of the
drug should not be changed until more information is available.
One heart expert wasn’t
surprised by the finding, however.
“Some commonly used
antibiotics should be taken with caution, especially for those people who are
at risk for heart disease,” said Dr. Suzanne Steinbaum, a preventive
cardiologist at Lenox Hill Hospital in New York City.
“As it has been shown
before, not all antibiotics are created equal when it comes to increasing the
risk of cardiovascular death,” she said. “If you have an underlying heart
condition, be certain to discuss it with your doctor before taking an
antibiotic prescription. There are definitely safer alternatives.”
Clarithromycin and
another antibiotic called roxithromycin belong to a group of antibiotics called
macrolides. It’s believed that macrolides increase the risk of potentially
deadly heart rhythm problems, the Danish researchers explained.
In the study, they
analyzed more than 5 million courses of antibiotic treatment with
clarithromycin, roxithromycin, or penicillin V given to Danish adults, aged 40
to 74, between 1997 and 2011.
During this period, 285
cardiac deaths occurred — 18 during the use of clarithromycin and 32 during the
use of roxithromycin. After adjusting for other factors, the researchers
concluded that ongoing use of clarithromycin was associated with a 76 percent
higher risk of cardiac death, compared with the use of penicillin V.
The absolute risk
difference was 37 cardiac deaths per 1 million courses with clarithromycin. The
authors noted that there was no heightened risk of cardiac death after
treatment with clarithromycin stopped.
Ongoing or past use of
roxithromycin was not associated with increased risk of cardiac death,
according to the study published online Aug. 19 in BMJ.
The study is “the first
large-scale population-based observational study to show significantly
increased cardiac risk with clarithromycin and the relative cardiac safety of
roxithromycin,” wrote a team led by Henrik Svanstrom of the Statens Serum
Institut in Copenhagen.
Because the study was
observational in nature (looking over past data), it could not prove a
cause-and-effect relationship. However, an expert familiar with antibiotics
said the findings are worthy of concern.
Although the risk to any
one patient remains very small, “it should still be considered by physicians
before prescribing this antibiotic,” said Dr. Ambreen Khalil, an infectious
disease specialist at Staten Island University Hospital in New York City.
“Patients with underlying heart conditions who are taking medications that
affect the heart rhythm may be particularly vulnerable,” she said.
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