id 2-s2.0-85070685740
spelling 2-s2.0-85070685740
Moayyedi P.; Eikelboom J.W.; Bosch J.; Connolly S.J.; Dyal L.; Shestakovska O.; Leong D.; Anand S.S.; Störk S.; Branch K.R.H.; Bhatt D.L.; Verhamme P.B.; O'Donnell M.; Maggioni A.P.; Lonn E.M.; Piegas L.S.; Ertl G.; Keltai M.; Bruns N.C.; Muehlhofer E.; Dagenais G.R.; Kim J.-H.; Hori M.; Steg P.G.; Hart R.G.; Diaz R.; Alings M.; Widimsky P.; Avezum A.; Probstfield J.; Zhu J.; Liang Y.; Lopez-Jaramillo P.; Kakkar A.K.; Parkhomenko A.N.; Ryden L.; Pogosova N.; Dans A.L.; Lanas F.; Commerford P.J.; Torp-Pedersen C.; Guzik T.J.; Vinereanu D.; Tonkin A.M.; Lewis B.S.; Felix C.; Yusoff K.; Metsarinne K.P.; Fox K.A.A.; Yusuf S.
Safety of Proton Pump Inhibitors Based on a Large, Multi-Year, Randomized Trial of Patients Receiving Rivaroxaban or Aspirin
2019
Gastroenterology
157
3
10.1053/j.gastro.2019.05.056
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85070685740&doi=10.1053%2fj.gastro.2019.05.056&partnerID=40&md5=85e2dcf3a6f3f0e5a4657b8440522fdb
Background & Aims: Proton pump inhibitors (PPIs) are effective at treating acid-related disorders. These drugs are well tolerated in the short term, but long-term treatment was associated with adverse events in observational studies. We aimed to confirm these findings in an adequately powered randomized trial. Methods: We performed a 3 × 2 partial factorial double-blind trial of 17,598 participants with stable cardiovascular disease and peripheral artery disease randomly assigned to groups given pantoprazole (40 mg daily, n = 8791) or placebo (n = 8807). Participants were also randomly assigned to groups that received rivaroxaban (2.5 mg twice daily) with aspirin (100 mg once daily), rivaroxaban (5 mg twice daily), or aspirin (100 mg) alone. We collected data on development of pneumonia, Clostridium difficile infection, other enteric infections, fractures, gastric atrophy, chronic kidney disease, diabetes, chronic obstructive lung disease, dementia, cardiovascular disease, cancer, hospitalizations, and all-cause mortality every 6 months. Patients were followed up for a median of 3.01 years, with 53,152 patient-years of follow-up. Results: There was no statistically significant difference between the pantoprazole and placebo groups in safety events except for enteric infections (1.4% vs 1.0% in the placebo group; odds ratio, 1.33; 95% confidence interval, 1.01–1.75). For all other safety outcomes, proportions were similar between groups except for C difficile infection, which was approximately twice as common in the pantoprazole vs the placebo group, although there were only 13 events, so this difference was not statistically significant. Conclusions: In a large placebo-controlled randomized trial, we found that pantoprazole is not associated with any adverse event when used for 3 years, with the possible exception of an increased risk of enteric infections. ClinicalTrials.gov Number: NCT01776424. © 2019 AGA Institute
W.B. Saunders
165085
English
Article
All Open Access; Bronze Open Access
author Moayyedi P.; Eikelboom J.W.; Bosch J.; Connolly S.J.; Dyal L.; Shestakovska O.; Leong D.; Anand S.S.; Störk S.; Branch K.R.H.; Bhatt D.L.; Verhamme P.B.; O'Donnell M.; Maggioni A.P.; Lonn E.M.; Piegas L.S.; Ertl G.; Keltai M.; Bruns N.C.; Muehlhofer E.; Dagenais G.R.; Kim J.-H.; Hori M.; Steg P.G.; Hart R.G.; Diaz R.; Alings M.; Widimsky P.; Avezum A.; Probstfield J.; Zhu J.; Liang Y.; Lopez-Jaramillo P.; Kakkar A.K.; Parkhomenko A.N.; Ryden L.; Pogosova N.; Dans A.L.; Lanas F.; Commerford P.J.; Torp-Pedersen C.; Guzik T.J.; Vinereanu D.; Tonkin A.M.; Lewis B.S.; Felix C.; Yusoff K.; Metsarinne K.P.; Fox K.A.A.; Yusuf S.
spellingShingle Moayyedi P.; Eikelboom J.W.; Bosch J.; Connolly S.J.; Dyal L.; Shestakovska O.; Leong D.; Anand S.S.; Störk S.; Branch K.R.H.; Bhatt D.L.; Verhamme P.B.; O'Donnell M.; Maggioni A.P.; Lonn E.M.; Piegas L.S.; Ertl G.; Keltai M.; Bruns N.C.; Muehlhofer E.; Dagenais G.R.; Kim J.-H.; Hori M.; Steg P.G.; Hart R.G.; Diaz R.; Alings M.; Widimsky P.; Avezum A.; Probstfield J.; Zhu J.; Liang Y.; Lopez-Jaramillo P.; Kakkar A.K.; Parkhomenko A.N.; Ryden L.; Pogosova N.; Dans A.L.; Lanas F.; Commerford P.J.; Torp-Pedersen C.; Guzik T.J.; Vinereanu D.; Tonkin A.M.; Lewis B.S.; Felix C.; Yusoff K.; Metsarinne K.P.; Fox K.A.A.; Yusuf S.
Safety of Proton Pump Inhibitors Based on a Large, Multi-Year, Randomized Trial of Patients Receiving Rivaroxaban or Aspirin
author_facet Moayyedi P.; Eikelboom J.W.; Bosch J.; Connolly S.J.; Dyal L.; Shestakovska O.; Leong D.; Anand S.S.; Störk S.; Branch K.R.H.; Bhatt D.L.; Verhamme P.B.; O'Donnell M.; Maggioni A.P.; Lonn E.M.; Piegas L.S.; Ertl G.; Keltai M.; Bruns N.C.; Muehlhofer E.; Dagenais G.R.; Kim J.-H.; Hori M.; Steg P.G.; Hart R.G.; Diaz R.; Alings M.; Widimsky P.; Avezum A.; Probstfield J.; Zhu J.; Liang Y.; Lopez-Jaramillo P.; Kakkar A.K.; Parkhomenko A.N.; Ryden L.; Pogosova N.; Dans A.L.; Lanas F.; Commerford P.J.; Torp-Pedersen C.; Guzik T.J.; Vinereanu D.; Tonkin A.M.; Lewis B.S.; Felix C.; Yusoff K.; Metsarinne K.P.; Fox K.A.A.; Yusuf S.
author_sort Moayyedi P.; Eikelboom J.W.; Bosch J.; Connolly S.J.; Dyal L.; Shestakovska O.; Leong D.; Anand S.S.; Störk S.; Branch K.R.H.; Bhatt D.L.; Verhamme P.B.; O'Donnell M.; Maggioni A.P.; Lonn E.M.; Piegas L.S.; Ertl G.; Keltai M.; Bruns N.C.; Muehlhofer E.; Dagenais G.R.; Kim J.-H.; Hori M.; Steg P.G.; Hart R.G.; Diaz R.; Alings M.; Widimsky P.; Avezum A.; Probstfield J.; Zhu J.; Liang Y.; Lopez-Jaramillo P.; Kakkar A.K.; Parkhomenko A.N.; Ryden L.; Pogosova N.; Dans A.L.; Lanas F.; Commerford P.J.; Torp-Pedersen C.; Guzik T.J.; Vinereanu D.; Tonkin A.M.; Lewis B.S.; Felix C.; Yusoff K.; Metsarinne K.P.; Fox K.A.A.; Yusuf S.
title Safety of Proton Pump Inhibitors Based on a Large, Multi-Year, Randomized Trial of Patients Receiving Rivaroxaban or Aspirin
title_short Safety of Proton Pump Inhibitors Based on a Large, Multi-Year, Randomized Trial of Patients Receiving Rivaroxaban or Aspirin
title_full Safety of Proton Pump Inhibitors Based on a Large, Multi-Year, Randomized Trial of Patients Receiving Rivaroxaban or Aspirin
title_fullStr Safety of Proton Pump Inhibitors Based on a Large, Multi-Year, Randomized Trial of Patients Receiving Rivaroxaban or Aspirin
title_full_unstemmed Safety of Proton Pump Inhibitors Based on a Large, Multi-Year, Randomized Trial of Patients Receiving Rivaroxaban or Aspirin
title_sort Safety of Proton Pump Inhibitors Based on a Large, Multi-Year, Randomized Trial of Patients Receiving Rivaroxaban or Aspirin
publishDate 2019
container_title Gastroenterology
container_volume 157
container_issue 3
doi_str_mv 10.1053/j.gastro.2019.05.056
url https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85070685740&doi=10.1053%2fj.gastro.2019.05.056&partnerID=40&md5=85e2dcf3a6f3f0e5a4657b8440522fdb
description Background & Aims: Proton pump inhibitors (PPIs) are effective at treating acid-related disorders. These drugs are well tolerated in the short term, but long-term treatment was associated with adverse events in observational studies. We aimed to confirm these findings in an adequately powered randomized trial. Methods: We performed a 3 × 2 partial factorial double-blind trial of 17,598 participants with stable cardiovascular disease and peripheral artery disease randomly assigned to groups given pantoprazole (40 mg daily, n = 8791) or placebo (n = 8807). Participants were also randomly assigned to groups that received rivaroxaban (2.5 mg twice daily) with aspirin (100 mg once daily), rivaroxaban (5 mg twice daily), or aspirin (100 mg) alone. We collected data on development of pneumonia, Clostridium difficile infection, other enteric infections, fractures, gastric atrophy, chronic kidney disease, diabetes, chronic obstructive lung disease, dementia, cardiovascular disease, cancer, hospitalizations, and all-cause mortality every 6 months. Patients were followed up for a median of 3.01 years, with 53,152 patient-years of follow-up. Results: There was no statistically significant difference between the pantoprazole and placebo groups in safety events except for enteric infections (1.4% vs 1.0% in the placebo group; odds ratio, 1.33; 95% confidence interval, 1.01–1.75). For all other safety outcomes, proportions were similar between groups except for C difficile infection, which was approximately twice as common in the pantoprazole vs the placebo group, although there were only 13 events, so this difference was not statistically significant. Conclusions: In a large placebo-controlled randomized trial, we found that pantoprazole is not associated with any adverse event when used for 3 years, with the possible exception of an increased risk of enteric infections. ClinicalTrials.gov Number: NCT01776424. © 2019 AGA Institute
publisher W.B. Saunders
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