Treatment with statins raises the risk of musculoskeletal diseases by
a fifth and is associated with an increased risk of injuries such as
dislocations and sprains, concludes a new analysis.
The large
study of 7,000 patients taking statins found they had a 13% increased
risk of injury-related conditions such as dislocation, sprain and strain
compared with those not taking statins.
Published in JAMA Internal Medicine yesterday,
the study also found a 9% increased risk of muscular aches and pains
and a significant 19% higher risk of any musculoskeletal disease in
those taking statins, compared with similar individuals who never used a
statin.
But some UK experts criticised the study, warning it
could put patients off adhering to statin treatment and that the
absolute increase in musculoskeletal conditions was very small. The
researchers used medical records to identify patients prescribed a
statin for a cumulative period of at least 90 days at baseline between
2004 and 2005. They then used propensity score matching to compare the
outcomes of 6,967 patients who used statins with an equal number of
similar patients who never used statins during the study, over a
follow-up period lasting from 2005 to 2010. The number needed to
treat (NNT) for one additional person to have a musculoskeletal disease
diagnosis was 47, while 37 patients would need to be treated for an
additional person to have a musculoskeletal injury and 58 for an
additional case of musculoskeletal pain.
The authors concluded a
‘more comprehensive’ risk benefit profile was needed for statins. They
said: ‘Statin use was associated with an increased likelihood of
musculoskeletal condition diagnoses, including injuries and pain.
Soft-tissue injuries are a lesser known adverse event of statins and
warrant additional research.’
More on this story here.
Eddie
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