Title: NSAIDs and GI and Renal Complications
1NSAIDs and GI and Renal Complications
- Lessons from Tennessee Medicaid population
studies - (and selected others)
2Overview
- Upper GI complications of NSAIDs
- Age
- Dose/duration
- Corticosteroids
- Coumadin
- Renal complications
- Other
3Age-specific peptic ulcer hospitalization rates
by sex and NSAID use, Saskatchewan, 1982-1986
Hospitalizations per1,000 person-years
Malenonusers
25
Femalenonusers
Maleusers
20
Femaleusers
15
10
5
0
15
20
25
30
35
40
45
50
55
60
65
70
75
80
85 Age
Garcia Rodriguez et al, Epidemiology 1992
4Hospitalizations for PUDTennessee Medicaid, age
65, 1984-86
Griffin et al Ann Intern Med 1991
5Gastrointestinal Complicationsmeta-analysis 5
studies that included dose
Henry et al Br Med J 1996
6Hospitalizations for PUDTennessee Medicaid, age
65, 1984-86
Smalley et al Am J Epidemiol 1995
7Hospitalizations for PUDTennessee Medicaid, age
65, 1984-86
Smalley et al Am J Epidemiol 1995
8Corticosteroids and NSAIDs
- Co-prescription 1-3 of elderly
- Similar to non-NSAID users
- Increases risk 13-15 fold over non-users
- Ulcer hospitalization 5-6 per 100 per year
9Coumadin and NSAIDs
- Co-prescription 1-2 of elderly
- Similar to non-NSAID users
- Increases risk of GI bleeding 12 fold over
non-users - Ulcer hospitalization 3 per 100 per year
10NSAIDs and Acute Renal Failure,Tennessee
Medicaid, aged 65, 1987-1991
- 1799 patients community acquired ARF
- 4.5 hospitalization per 1000 person-years
- Median length of stay 8 days
- 3 dialysis
- 30 day mortality 36
11NSAIDs and other risk factors for ARF
- 18 NSAID users
- Adjusted RR 1.58
- Other risk factors
- Older age
- Male gender
- Black race
- Nusing home resident
- Diuretics
- ACE inhibitors
- Other co-morbidity
12Individual NSAIDs
- NSAID RR 95 CI
- Ibuprofen 1.63 (1.23 to 2.08)
- Naproxen 1.03 (0.68 to 1.56)
- Ketoprofen 1.55 (0.54 to 4.45)
13Ibuprofen dose and ARF Tennessee Medicaid, age
65, 1984-86
Griffin et al Am J Epidemiol 2000
14Duration of NSAID use and ARF Tennessee
Medicaid, age 65, 1984-86
Griffin et al Am J Epidemiol 2000
15Other Considerations Upper GI and renal effect
- OTC drugs may be self-administered as previously
prescribed (high dose) - OTC drugs may be used for long duration
- Risk increases with combination of gt1 NSAID
- For GI events risk increases with aspirin use
16Other Considerations Important other adverse
effects
- Hypertension
- Small increases in mean BP, large population
effect - Small bowel and lower GI bleeding
- Dyspepsia
- Increased health care costs
- Other