What proportion of symptomatic side effects in patients taking statins are genuinely caused by the drug? Systematic review of randomized placebo-controlled trials to aid individual patient choice

被引:157
作者
Finegold, Judith A. [1 ]
Manisty, Charlotte H. [1 ]
Goldacre, Ben [2 ]
Barron, Anthony J. [1 ]
Francis, Darrel P. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ London Imperial Coll Sci Technol & Med, Natl Heart & Lung Inst, London, England
[2] London Sch Hyg & Trop Med, London WC1, England
关键词
side-effects; Adverse events; statins; meta-analysis; ALL-CAUSE MORTALITY; PRIMARY PREVENTION; SECONDARY PREVENTION; DOSE ATORVASTATIN; ADVERSE EVENTS; THERAPY; METAANALYSIS; SIMVASTATIN; EFFICACY; OUTCOMES;
D O I
10.1177/2047487314525531
中图分类号
R5 [内科学];
学科分类号
1002 ; 100201 ;
摘要
Objective Discussions about statin efficacy in cardiovascular prevention are always based on data from blinded randomized controlled trials (RCTs) comparing statin to placebo; however, discussion of side effects is not. Clinicians often assume symptoms occurring with statins are caused by statins, encouraging discontinuation. We test this assumption and calculate an evidence-based estimate of the probability of a symptom being genuinely attributable to the statin itself. Methods We identified RCTs comparing statin to placebo for cardiovascular prevention that reported side effects separately in the two arms. Results Among 14 primary prevention trials (46,262 participants), statin therapy increased diabetes by absolute risk of 0.5% (95% CI 0.1-1%, p = 0.012), meanwhile reducing death by a similar extent: -0.5% (-0.9 to -0.2%, p = 0.003). In the 15 secondary prevention RCTs (37,618 participants), statins decreased death by 1.4% (-2.1 to -0.7%, p < 0.001). There were no other statin-attributable symptoms, although asymptomatic liver transaminase elevation was 0.4% more frequent with statins across all trials. Serious adverse events and withdrawals were similar in both arms. Conclusions Only a small minority of symptoms reported on statins are genuinely due to the statins: almost all would occur just as frequently on placebo. Only development of new-onset diabetes mellitus was significantly higher on statins than placebo; nevertheless only 1 in 5 of new cases were actually caused by statins. Higher statin doses produce a detectable effect, but even still the proportion attributable to statins is variable: for asymptomatic liver enzyme elevation, the majority are attributable to the higher dose; in contrast for muscle aches, the majority are not.
引用
收藏
页码:464 / 474
页数:11
相关论文
共 35 条
[1]   DISCONTINUATION OF ANTIHYPERLIPIDEMIC DRUGS - DO RATES REPORTED IN CLINICAL-TRIALS REFLECT RATES IN PRIMARY-CARE SETTINGS [J].
ANDRADE, SE ;
WALKER, AM ;
GOTTLIEB, LK ;
HOLLENBERG, NK ;
TESTA, MA ;
SAPERIA, GM ;
PLATT, R .
NEW ENGLAND JOURNAL OF MEDICINE, 1995, 332 (17) :1125-1131
[2]   Intensive lowering of LDL cholesterol with 80 mg versus 20 mg simvastatin daily in 12 064 survivors of myocardial infarction: a double-blind randomised trial [J].
Armitage, Jane ;
Bowman, Louise ;
Wallendszus, Karl ;
Bulbulia, Richard ;
Rahimi, Kazem ;
Haynes, Richard ;
Parish, Sarah ;
Peto, Richard ;
Collins, Rory ;
Meade, T. ;
Sleight, P. ;
Collins, R. ;
Armitage, J. ;
Bowman, L. ;
Parish, S. ;
Peto, R. ;
Barton, J. ;
Bray, C. ;
Wincott, E. ;
Dayanandan, R. ;
Clarke, R. ;
Graham, I. ;
Simpson, D. ;
Warlow, C. ;
Wilken, D. ;
Tobert, J. ;
Mushner, T. ;
Doll, R. ;
Wilhelmsen, L. ;
Fox, K. ;
Hill, C. ;
Sandercock, P. ;
Webster, J. ;
Henderson, J. ;
Nixon, A. ;
Lackie, S. ;
Thompson, J. ;
Brown, M. ;
Blackwood, S. ;
Morgan, M. ;
Rhoden, W. ;
Saeed, B. ;
Houghton, M. ;
Nicholson, A. ;
Simpson, C. ;
Hoburn, B. ;
Cooper, I. ;
Gallivan, A. ;
Pickerell, E. ;
Hancock, J. .
LANCET, 2010, 376 (9753) :1658-1669
[3]   Efficacy and safety of more intensive lowering of LDL cholesterol: a meta-analysis of data from 170 000 participants in 26 randomised trials [J].
Baigent, C. ;
Blackwell, L. ;
Emberson, J. ;
Holland, L. E. ;
Reith, C. ;
Bhala, N. ;
Peto, R. ;
Barnes, E. H. ;
Keech, A. ;
Simes, J. ;
Collins, R. .
LANCET, 2010, 376 (9753) :1670-1681
[4]   Efficacy and safety of cholesterol-lowering treatment: prospective meta-analysis of data from 90,056 participants in 14 randomised trials of statins [J].
Baigent, C ;
Keech, A ;
Kearney, PM ;
Blackwell, L ;
Buck, G ;
Pollicino, C ;
Kirby, A ;
Sourjina, T ;
Peto, R ;
Collins, R ;
Simes, J .
LANCET, 2005, 366 (9493) :1267-1278
[5]   Systematic review of genuine versus spurious side-effects of beta-blockers in heart failure using placebo control: Recommendations for patient information [J].
Barron, Anthony J. ;
Zaman, Nabeela ;
Cole, Graham D. ;
Wensel, Roland ;
Okonko, Darlington O. ;
Francis, Darrel P. .
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CARDIOLOGY, 2013, 168 (04) :3572-3579
[6]   Nonspecific medication side effects and the nocebo phenomenon [J].
Barsky, AJ ;
Saintfort, R ;
Rogers, MP ;
Borus, JF .
JAMA-JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN MEDICAL ASSOCIATION, 2002, 287 (05) :622-627
[7]   Mild to moderate muscular symptoms with high-dosage statin therapy in hyperlipidemic patients -: The PRIMO study [J].
Bruckert, E ;
Hayem, G ;
Dejager, S ;
Yau, C ;
Bégaud, B .
CARDIOVASCULAR DRUGS AND THERAPY, 2005, 19 (06) :403-414
[8]   Statins in the Treatment of Dyslipidemia in the Presence of Elevated Liver Aminotransferase Levels: A Therapeutic Dilemma [J].
Calderon, Rossana M. ;
Cubeddu, Luigi X. ;
Goldberg, Ronald B. ;
Schiff, Eugene R. .
MAYO CLINIC PROCEEDINGS, 2010, 85 (04) :349-356
[9]   Intensive versus moderate lipid lowering with statins after acute coronary syndromes [J].
Cannon, CP ;
Braunwald, E ;
McCabe, CH ;
Rader, DJ ;
Rouleau, JL ;
Belder, R ;
Joyal, SV ;
Hill, KA ;
Pfeffer, MA ;
Skene, AM .
NEW ENGLAND JOURNAL OF MEDICINE, 2004, 350 (15) :1495-1504
[10]   Risk of incident diabetes among patients treated with statins: population based study [J].
Carter, Aleesa A. ;
Gomes, Tara ;
Camacho, Ximena ;
Juurlink, David N. ;
Shah, Baiju R. ;
Mamdani, Muhammad M. .
BMJ-BRITISH MEDICAL JOURNAL, 2013, 346