(Press-News.org) The antibiotic clarithromycin – widely used for treating lower respiratory tract infections like pneumonia and acute exacerbations (sudden worsening) of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) – may be associated with an increased risk of heart problems, finds a study published on bmj.com today.
The authors say their findings require confirmation, but add to a growing body of evidence suggesting a possible link between long term cardiovascular risks and certain antibiotics, known as macrolides.
Clarithromycin is often used to treat a sudden increase in symptoms for the progressive lung disease COPD - and in community acquired pneumonia - two of the most frequent causes of hospital admission in the UK. Previous studies have suggested that cardiovascular events, such as heart failure, heart rhythm problems, or sudden cardiac death, may be increased during treatment with clarithromycin, but the long term effects are still unclear.
So a team of UK researchers, led by the University of Dundee, set out to examine this association in more detail. They analysed data on 1,343 patients admitted to hospital with acute exacerbations of COPD and 1,631 patients admitted with community acquired pneumonia.
They classified all patients who received at least one dose of clarithromycin during their hospital visit as macrolide users and compared them with patients who did not receive any macrolide antibiotics during their visit. Over one year, 268 COPD patients and 171 pneumonia patients were admitted to hospital as a result of a cardiovascular event.
In all, after allowing for other factors, 73/281 (26%) of the patients prescribed clarithromycin during acute exacerbations of COPD had at least one cardiovascular event over the next year compared to 195/1062 (18%) of the patients who didn't get this antibiotic (Hazard Ratio 1.50 - where Hazard Ratio is a measure of the number of events per unit time divided by the number of people at risk of the event).
In the same group the Hazard Ratio for acute coronary syndrome (severe angina attacks or heart attacks) was 1.67. Among patients given clarithromycin for community acquired pneumonia, 123/980 (12%) had at least one cardiovascular event compared to 48/651 (7%) not on the drug (Hazard Ratio 1.68). There was no increased risk of acute coronary syndrome.
For COPD, a significant association was also found between clarithromycin use and cardiovascular mortality, but not all cause mortality. In contrast, for community acquired pneumonia, no association was found between clarithromycin use and cardiovascular mortality or all cause mortality.
Longer durations of clarithromycin use were associated with more cardiovascular events. However, use of other types of antibiotics, such as ß-lactams, showed no association, suggesting an effect specific to clarithromycin, say the authors.
For COPD, a significant association was also found between clarithromycin use and cardiovascular mortality, but not all cause mortality. In contrast, for community acquired pneumonia, no association was found between clarithromycin use and cardiovascular mortality or all cause mortality.
Longer durations of clarithromycin use were associated with more cardiovascular events. However, use of other types of antibiotics, such as ß-lactams, showed no association, suggesting an effect specific to clarithromycin, say the authors.
Overall, the results suggest that there will be an additional cardiovascular event for every eight patients given clarithromycin compared to patients not given the drug (or one in 11 for pneumonia).
The data also suggest that the increased risk may persist beyond the time when clarithromycin is stopped. This could be due to clarithromycin's effect on the body's inflammatory process in patients with chronic lung conditions.
The authors conclude that the findings "need to be validated in other datasets before recommendations to change practice can be made."
### END
Common antibiotic linked to heart problems in patients with lung conditions
Study adds to evidence of long term heart risks with some antibiotics
2013-03-22
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
NIH study shows people with serious mental illnesses can lose weight
2013-03-22
VIDEO:
Over 80 percent of people with serious mental illnesses are overweight or obese, which contributes to a higher risk of cardiovascular disease and a shortened life expectancy than that of...
Click here for more information.
People with serious mental illnesses such as schizophrenia, bipolar disorder and major depression can lose weight and keep it off through a modified lifestyle intervention program, a National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH)-funded study reported ...
Study reveals how serotonin receptors can shape drug effects from LSD to migraine medication
2013-03-22
LA JOLLA, CA – March 21, 2012 – A team including scientists from The Scripps Research Institute (TSRI), the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and the Chinese Academy of Sciences has determined and analyzed the high-resolution atomic structures of two kinds of human serotonin receptor. The new findings help explain why some drugs that interact with these receptors have had unexpectedly complex and sometimes harmful effects.
"Understanding the structure-function of these receptors allows us to discover new biology of serotonin signaling and also gives us better ...
Virginia Tech researchers alter mosquito genome in step toward controlling disease
2013-03-22
Virginia Tech researchers successfully used a gene disruption technique to change the eye color of a mosquito — a critical step toward new genetic strategies aimed at disrupting the transmission of diseases such as dengue fever.
Zach Adelman and Kevin Myles, both associate professors of entomology in the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences and affiliated researchers with the Fralin Life Science Institute, study the transmission of vector-borne diseases and develop novel methods of control, based on genetics.
In a groundbreaking study recently published in the journal ...
Multiple sclerosis research: The thalamus moves into the spotlight
2013-03-22
BUFFALO, N.Y. – A growing body of research by multiple sclerosis (MS) investigators at the University at Buffalo and international partners is providing powerful new evidence that the brain's gray matter reflects important changes in the disease that could allow clinicians to diagnose earlier and to better monitor and predict how the disease will progress.
Over the past three years, the UB researchers and their partners around the world, supported by an active fellowship program at UB's Buffalo Neuroimaging Analysis Center (BNAC), have published journal papers and given ...
Berkeley Lab researchers use metamaterials to observe giant photonic spin hall effect
2013-03-22
Researchers with the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE)'s Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab) have once again demonstrated the incredible capabilities of metamaterials – artificial nanoconstructs whose optical properties arise from their physical structure rather than their chemical composition. Engineering a unique two-dimensional sheet of gold nanoantennas, the researchers were able to obtain the strongest signal yet of the photonic spin Hall effect, an optical phenomenon of quantum mechanics that could play a prominent role in the future of computing.
"With ...
Program improves Ph.D. student diversity
2013-03-22
PROVIDENCE, R.I. [Brown University] — A new paper in the peer-reviewed journal CBE—Life Sciences Education describes a Brown University program that has significantly improved recruiting and performance of underrepresented minority students in its nine life sciences doctoral programs over the last four years.
Data in the paper show increases in applications, admissions, enrollments, test scores, grades and scientific publications and presentations among underrepresented minority students after implementation of the program called the Initiative to Maximize Student Development ...
New method developed to expand blood stem cells for bone marrow transplant
2013-03-22
NEW YORK (March 21, 2013) -- More than 50,000 stem cell transplants are performed each year worldwide. A research team led by Weill Cornell Medical College investigators may have solved a major issue of expanding adult hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) outside the human body for clinical use in bone marrow transplantation -- a critical step towards producing a large supply of blood stem cells needed to restore a healthy blood system.
In the journal Blood, Weill Cornell researchers and collaborators from Memorial-Sloan Kettering Cancer Center describe how they engineered ...
Pain reliever shows anti-viral activity against flu
2013-03-22
The over-the-counter anti-inflammatory drug naproxen may also exhibit antiviral activity against influenza A virus, according to a team of French scientists. The finding, the result of a structure-based investigation, is published online ahead of print in the journal Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy.
New influenza vaccines must be developed annually, because the surface proteins they target mutate rapidly, the way cars used to get a whole new look every year. The researchers, led by Anny Slama-Schwok of the Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique, Jouy en ...
Scientists create new tools for battling secondhand smoke
2013-03-22
Dartmouth researchers have taken an important step in the ongoing battle against secondhand tobacco smoke. They have pioneered the development of a breakthrough device that can immediately detect the presence of secondhand smoke and even third-hand smoke.
Smaller and lighter than a cellphone and about the size of a Matchbox car, the device uses polymer films to collect and measure nicotine in the air. A sensor chip then records the data on an SD memory card. The technology is described in a new study appearing in the journal Nicotine and Tobacco Research.
"We have ...
Study offers new way to discover HIV vaccine targets
2013-03-22
Decades of research and three large-scale clinical trials have so far failed to yield an effective HIV vaccine, in large part because the virus evolves so rapidly that it can evade any vaccine-induced immune response.
Researchers from the Ragon Institute of MGH, MIT and Harvard University have now developed a new approach to vaccine design that may allow them to cut off those evolutionary escape routes. The researchers have developed and experimentally validated a computational method that can analyze viral protein sequences to determine how well different viral strains ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
NHS urged to offer single pill to all over-50s to prevent heart attacks and strokes
Australian researchers call for greater diversity in genomics
The pot is already boiling for 2% of the world’s amphibians: new study
A new way to predict cancer's spread? Scientists look at 'stickiness' of tumor cells
Prehistoric bone tool ‘factory’ hints at early development of abstract reasoning in human ancestors
Study: Vaping does not help US tobacco smokers quit
Insect populations are declining — and that is not a good thing
Scientists discover genes to grow bigger tomatoes and eggplants
Effects of combining coronary calcium score with treatment on plaque progression in familial coronary artery disease
Cancer screening 3 years after the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic
Trajectories of sleep duration, sleep onset timing, and continuous glucose monitoring in adults
Sports gambling and drinking behaviors over time
For better quantum sensing, go with the flow
Toxic environmental pollutants linked to faster aging and health risks in US adults
Jerome Morris voted AERA President-Elect; key members elected to AERA Council
Study reveals how agave plants survive extreme droughts
Aligning Science Across Parkinson’s (ASAP) launches a second funding opportunity to accelerate novel tool development to advance Parkinson's disease research
New study: Eating mangos daily shown to improve insulin sensitivity and blood glucose control
Highly radioactive nuclear waste – how to keep it from oblivion
Generations ‘sync’ up in rural ‘glades’ to boost technology use for health
Unveiling the mechanism of maintenance of replication and transcription in mitochondria
Pioneering research into brain cancer is awarded the world’s largest brain research prize, The Brain Prize
Concrete evidence: Japanese buildings absorb 14% of cement production's carbon footprint
New study examines how physics students perceive recognition
For some, childhood adversity can promote resilience to anxiety disorders
A sustainable iron catalyst for water oxidation in renewable energy
Cloud–radiation feedbacks found to be key to the diverse tropical pacific warming projections
Body image perceptions take shape from early childhood, psychologists reveal
Can long-term use of anti-inflammatory medications prevent dementia?
Review supports introducing small amounts of food allergens during early childhood
[Press-News.org] Common antibiotic linked to heart problems in patients with lung conditionsStudy adds to evidence of long term heart risks with some antibiotics