Prescribing painkillers for arthritis carries lo risk, study claims
The risks posed by the prescribed use of the most common types of painkiller for arthritis are relatively low, a large international study has concluded.
The risks posed by the prescribed use of the most common types of painkiller for arthritis are relatively low, a large international study has concluded.
Scientists based in the UK, Denmark and the Netherlands studied more than 7,000 people to assess the safety of two types of medication.
They compared the safety of non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) - such as ibuprofen, diclofenac and naproxen - with a newer class of more targeted drugs called COX2 inhibitors, which include celecoxib.
It followed concerns from doctors and patients over the long-term effect of NSAIDs on the stomach and gut, and concerns over whether COX2 drugs may be associated with increased cardiovascular diseases.
Experts said the trial found the use of either NSAIDS or celecoxib was associated with only a low rate of the cardiovascular problems studied''.
Furthermore, gastrointestinal adverse effects studied were very rare indeed,'' they concluded.
The trial was led by the University of Dundee, working with various universities in Scotland, England, Denmark and the Netherlands.
Those involved in the project said the findings should reassure patients and doctors.
Study chief investigator Professor Tom MacDonald, of the University of Dundee's School of Medicine, said: If you need to take these medicines for arthritis pains and you have no history of heart attack or stroke, then either type of medicine seems acceptably safe.
These results offer significant reassurance to the many patients taking these medicines and can give increased confidence to the doctors prescribing these drugs.''
The SCOT study (Standard care versus Celecoxib Outcome Trial) is published in the European Heart Journal.
It was sponsored by Dundee University, with a research grant from Pfizer USA.
Mike Knapton, associate medical director at the British Heart Foundation, said: In recent years there has been concern about the association between commonly-prescribed painkillers, known as non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, with an increased risk of developing heart disease. These drugs are used to help treat conditions such as arthritis.
This study compared two different kinds of these non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs and found that in patients over the age of 60 with no evidence of pre-existing heart and circulatory disease there was no difference in the risk of having a heart attack or stroke, when switching from older to the newer type of medication.
This is reassuring for patients, however all prescriptions must be assessed on an individual basis and discussed with your GP to find the treatment that is right for you.
This is particularly important for people with more than one condition, such as arthritis and heart disease, so the benefits and risks of any one treatment can be weighed up.''