Reuters Health Information: PPI use tied to higher risk of hepatic encephalopathy in cirrhotic patients
PPI use tied to higher risk of hepatic encephalopathy in cirrhotic patients
Last Updated: 2016-09-22
By Reuters Staff
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Patients with cirrhosis who are
treated with a proton pump inhibitor (PPI) face an increased
risk of hepatic encephalopathy, and the risk rises in a
dose-dependent fashion, a large study from Taiwan has found.
"It is therefore important for healthcare providers to
carefully consider prolonged PPI use by patients with
cirrhosis," conclude Dr. Ching-Liang Lu and colleagues from
National Yang-Ming University School of Medicine in Taipei in
their paper in Gastroenterology, online September 14.
Hepatic encephalopathy (HE), they explain, is a serious
complication of cirrhosis and is associated with gut microbial
imbalance. PPIs, which are often prescribed to patients with
cirrhosis, can contribute to small bowel bacterial overgrowth.
To see whether PPI use predisposes cirrhotic patients to HE,
the researchers did a matched case-control study using the
Taiwan National Health Insurance database. The study included
2,332 mostly male patients with cirrhosis, half with and half
without an occurrence of HE.
They defined PPI use as >30 cumulative defined daily doses
(cDDDs) and non-PPI use as 30 cDDDs or less.
Roughly 38% patients with HE and 21% without HE were on a
PPI. Prolonged PPI use was more frequently identified in
cirrhotic patients with HE occurrence than in their peers
without HE.
"All 4 models after logistic regression demonstrated a
consistent dose-dependent relationships between PPI use and HE
risk," the team reports.
The adjusted odd ratios were 1.41, 1.51 and 3.01 for
patients with 30 to 120 cDDDs, 120 to 365 cDDDs, and >365 cDDDs,
respectively, compared with PPI non-users (all p<0.05).
Stratified by each individual PPI, the use of pantoprazole,
lansoprazole, omeprazole and esomeprazole, but not rabeprazole,
were associated with an increased risk of developing HE.
The small sample size of rabeprazole users might explain
this finding, the researchers say, adding, "Another possibility
is the metabolic and pharmacokinetic differences among different
PPIs."
They say that to their knowledge, "this is the first study
showing a dose-response relationship between PPI use and the
risk of HE occurrence in cirrhotic patients after controlling
for the confounding effects of age, sex, income, level of
urbanization, medical comorbidities, and using psychotropic
medicine during the follow-up."
Given that PPI therapy is common in cirrhotic patients, the
authors suggest that it is "important to periodically review the
appropriateness of prolonged PPI use in cirrhotic patients,"
especially those at high risk of developing HE.
Dr. Lu did not respond to request for comment by press time.
The study had no commercial funding and the authors have no
disclosures.
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/2co9SxU
Gastroenterol 2016.
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