Reuters Health Information: Statins lower the risk of cirrhosis in chronic hepatitis B
Statins lower the risk of cirrhosis in chronic hepatitis B
Last Updated: 2016-05-24
By Will Boggs MD
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Statins lower the risk of
cirrhosis and its decompensation in patients with chronic
hepatitis B, researchers from Taiwan report.
Statins have previously been shown to reduce fibrosis
progression and cirrhosis in patients with chronic hepatitis C,
but their effects in patients with chronic hepatitis B remain
unknown.
Dr. Yi-Wen Huang, from Cathay General Hospital Medical
Center, Taipei, Taiwan, and colleagues used data from the
National Health Insurance Research Database in Taiwan to
investigate the risk of cirrhosis, its complications, and its
decompensation in chronic hepatitis B patients who received
statin therapy during follow-up.
Among 298,761 chronic hepatitis B patients, they identified
6,543 adult patients taking statins and matched them by
propensity score with 6,543 similar adults not taking statins.
After controlling for other factors, patients taking
statins were 48.8% less likely than patients not taking statins
to develop cirrhosis, according to the May 10 online report in
the American Journal of Gastroenterology.
The risk of cirrhosis was also lower among patients
receiving triglyceride-lowering drugs.
Patients taking statins were also 46.6% less likely than
patients not taking statins to develop decompensated cirrhosis.
These protective effects appeared to be greater with higher
dosage and longer duration of statin use.
Reached for comment, Dr. Vijay Shah, Mayo Clinic's chair of
gastroenterology and hepatology, Rochester, Minnesota, told
Reuters Health by email, "This fits with other recently emerging
data suggesting statins can be beneficial in patients with
chronic liver disease. It is surprising to many who are used to
prior and somewhat outdated concerns about statins and liver
test elevations."
"More studies are needed to further support the premise
that statins are beneficial for patients with chronic liver
disease," Dr. Shah said. "If and when these additional evidences
emerge, then statins may be encouraged in this patient
population."
Dr. Raymond T. Chung, from Massachusetts General Hospital,
Harvard Medical School, Boston, told Reuters Health by email,
"Statins given for traditional indications are not
contraindicated in persons with chronic liver diseases such as
hepatitis B and may even be beneficial. Monitoring of liver
function should still continue to occur when patients with
chronic liver diseases are placed on statin therapy."
"It is still premature to make a recommendation to treat
for this reason, since this was a retrospective analysis of a
non-randomized study," explained Dr. Chung, who also wasn't
involved in the study. "It is still theoretically possible, for
instance, that the choice to treat with and to dose with higher
levels of statins could have been influenced by the perceived
lack of meaningful liver disease by clinicians. This may have
been prompted by a general aversion to prescribing statins to
patients with liver disease, which does not appear to be
justified in this and other studies."
Dr. Huang did not respond to a request for comments.
The authors reported no external funding or disclosures.
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/1sNTaRd
Am J Gastroenterol 2016.
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