COMMON ANTIBIOTICS LINKED WITH HEART DEATH
The antibiotic
clarithromycin -- widely used for treating common bacterial infections -- is
associated with an increased risk of heart deaths, finds a study published on
thebmj.com today.
The authors say their
findings require urgent confirmation, given that many millions of people are
prescribed the drug each year. But they stress that the absolute risk is small
and that prescribing practice should not be changed until results have been
confirmed in an independent study.
Clarithromycin belongs
to a group of antibiotics known as macrolides. Macrolide antibiotics prolong
the duration of electrical activity of the heart muscle (known as the QT
interval) and are therefore thought to increase the risk of potentially fatal
heart rhythm problems.
Given this background,
the cardiac safety profiles of individual macrolides need to be studied in
greater detail to help guide clinical treatment decisions.
So a team of Danish
researchers decided to assess the risk of cardiac death associated with
clarithromycin and another macrolide called roxithromycin, compared with
penicillin V, an antibiotic with no known cardiac risk.
Using national
databases, they identified over 5 million treatment courses among Danish adults
aged 40-74 years from 1997 to 2011 (160,297 with clarithromycin, 588,988 with
roxithromycin and 4,355,309 with penicillin V).
Individuals with
serious disease, who may be at high baseline risk of death, were excluded from
the analysis.
A total of 285 cardiac
deaths were observed during ongoing use with the study drugs, 18 of which
occurred during use of clarithromycin and 32 during use of roxithromycin.
After adjusting for
factors such as age, sex, baseline cardiac risk and use of other medication,
ongoing use of clarithromycin was associated with a 76% higher risk of cardiac
death compared with use of penicillin V. There was no increased risk of cardiac
death with clarithromycin after treatment had ended.
The absolute risk
difference was 37 cardiac deaths per 1 million courses with clarithromycin. No
increased risk of cardiac death was found with ongoing or past use of
roxithromycin.
"Our study
expands on the available knowledge of the cardiac safety of macrolides, being
the first large scale population based observational study to show
significantly increased cardiac risk with clarithromycin and the relative
cardiac safety of roxithromycin," write the authors.
The authors emphasise
that the absolute increase in risk is small and should have limited, if any,
effect on the prescribing practice in individual patients. However, they note,
"clarithromycin is one of the more commonly used antibiotics in many
countries and many millions of people are prescribed this drug each year; thus,
the total number of excess (potentially avoidable) cardiac deaths may not be
negligible."
Before these results
are used to guide clinical decision making, "confirmation in independent
populations is an urgent priority given the widespread use of macrolide
antibiotics," they conclude.
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