Painkillers May Increase The Risk Of Heart Attack According To A Research. Ibuprofen and other non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDS) may increase the risk of heart attack, according to research published in this week’s BMJ.
Patients should not stop taking the drugs involved, the authors caution, but further investigation into these treatments is needed, they say.
In the biggest study of its kind to date, researchers identified 9,218 patients across England, Scotland and Wales who suffered a heart attack for the first time over a four-year period. Patients ranged in age from 25 to 100.
The investigators looked at the prescribing patterns for these patients, tracking whether and when they had been prescribed NSAIDS. This class of medications, which commonly are prescribed to relieve inflammation and pain, includes ibuprofen, diclofenac (Advil, Motrin, etc.), naproxen (Aleve, Nuprin, etc.), celecoxib (Celebrex) and rofecoxib (Vioxx) plus a host of other less commonly prescribed anti-inflammatories.
Rofecoxib is no longer commercially available, having been withdrawn from the market in 2004. NSAIDS Increased Risk
The findings were adjusted to allow for several other heart-attack risk factors including age, obesity and smoking habits. Importantly, the researchers also adjusted for whether patient already suffered from heart disease or were prescribed aspirin.
For those who were prescribed NSAIDS in the three months just before the heart attack, the risk increased compared with those who had not taken these drugs in the previous three years, the researchers found. For ibuprofen, the risk increased by almost a quarter (24%) and for diclofenac, it rose by over a half (55%).
The newer generation of anti-inflammatories known as COX-2 inhibitors also were associated with increased rates of first-time heart attack. Those patients who were prescribed the drugs in the preceeding three months were at 21% higher risk of heart attack if taking celecoxib (Celebrex) and 32% increased risk if taking rofecoxib (Vioxx).
Considerable Implications for Public Health
Since this study was concluded, rofecoxib was withdrawn due to concerns over heart-attack risk. That makes the impact of this study on patients even more important, say the authors, since those previously taking rofecoxib will have turned to the other anti-inflammatories in greater numbers.
The most significant findings were for the drugs ibuprofen, diclofenac and rofecoxib, say the authors. In terms of “numbers needed to harm” in the 65 and over age group, for those taking diclofenac, one extra patient for every 521 patients was likely to suffer a first-time heart attack.
For rofecoxib, the figure was one patient for every 695 patients; and for ibuprofen, one patient for every 1,005 patients was at risk.
“Given the high prevalence of the use of these drugs in elderly people and the increased risk of myocardial infarction [heart attack] with age, the relatively large number of patients needed to harm could have considerable implications for public health,” say the authors.
The nature of this report, an observational study may make it prone to other explanations for the findings, say the authors. “However, enough concerns exist to warrant a reconsideration of the cardiovascular safety of all NSAIDS,” they conclude.
Need Legal Help Regarding Painkillers?
The personal injury attorneys at Parker Waichman LLP offer free, no-obligation case evaluations. For more information, fill out our online contact form or call 1-800-YOURLAWYER (1-800-968-7529).
More on NSAIDs and various side effects:
NSAID Use in Pregnancy: Dangers and Legal Recourse
- NSAID Low Amniotic Fluid (Oligohydramnios) Fetal Injury and Stillbirth Lawsuit Lawyers
- Adverse Effects of NSAIDs on Ovulation
- FDA: NSAIDs Increase Risk of Stroke
- Adverse Effects of NSAIDs on Ovulation
- FDA: NSAIDs Increase Risk of Stroke
- NSAIDs May Lead To Increased Risks For Heart Attack
- Painkillers Lawsuits – Popular Painkillers Side Effects Injury
- Study Links Painkillers, Heart-Attack Risk
- How Safe Are the New COX-2 Painkillers
- COX-2 Drugs May Not be Worth the Money
- NSAIDs May Hide Prostate Cancer Risks
- Safety Information COX-2 Inhibitor NSAIDs
- Painkiller Users Protected Stomach Bleeding
- Aleve Lawsuits – Painkillers Risks, Aleve Side Effects Info
- Antibiotic in Childhood or Heavy NSAID Use
- New Study Suggests That Ibuprofen And Other Non-steroidal Anti-inflammatories (Nsaids), Which Had Been Regarded As Safe, May Also Be Linked To An Increased Risk Of Heart Attack
- Small-To-Moderate Risk Of Birth Defects Seen With NSAIDs
- Stronger Warning Label Placed on Non-Aspirin NSAIDs
- NSAIDs in Early Pregnancy May Double Miscarriage Risk
- NSAIDS May Up Heart Attack, Strokes Risks