Publication: Risk of Ischemic Cerebrovascular and Coronary Events in Adult Users of Anticonvulsant Medications in Routine Care Settings
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Date
2013
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Blackwell Publishing Ltd
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Citation
Patorno, Elisabetta, Robert J. Glynn, Sonia Hernandez‐Diaz, Jerry Avorn, Peter M. Wahl, Rhonda L. Bohn, Daniel Mines, Jun Liu, and Sebastian Schneeweiss. 2013. “Risk of Ischemic Cerebrovascular and Coronary Events in Adult Users of Anticonvulsant Medications in Routine Care Settings.” Journal of the American Heart Association: Cardiovascular and Cerebrovascular Disease 2 (4): e000208. doi:10.1161/JAHA.113.000208. http://dx.doi.org/10.1161/JAHA.113.000208.
Research Data
Abstract
Background: Older‐generation anticonvulsants that highly induce cytochrome P450 enzyme system activity produce metabolic abnormalities that may increase cardiovascular risk. The objective of this study was to evaluate the risk of ischemic cerebrovascular and coronary events in adult new users of anticonvulsants that highly induce cytochrome P450 activity compared with other anticonvulsant agents, as observed in a routine care setting. Methods and Results: This was a cohort study of patients 40 to 64 years old from the HealthCore Integrated Research Database who had initiated an anticonvulsant medication between 2001 and 2006 and had no recorded major coronary or cerebrovascular condition in the 6 months before treatment initiation. Propensity score (PS) matching was used to evaluate ischemic cerebrovascular and coronary risk among anticonvulsant new users. High‐dimensional propensity score (hdPS)–matched analyses were used to confirm adjusted findings. The study identified 913 events in 166 031 unmatched new treatment episodes with anticonvulsant drugs. In a PS‐matched population of 22 864 treatment episodes, the rate ratio (RR) for ischemic coronary or cerebrovascular events associated with highly inducing agents versus other agents was 1.22 (95% CI, 0.90‐1.65). The RR moved to 0.99 (95% CI, 0.73‐1.33) with adjustment for hdPS matching (RR, 1.47; 95% CI, 0.95‐2.28 for cerebrovascular events; RR, 0.70; 95% CI, 0.47‐1.05 for coronary events). Conclusions: In this exploratory analysis, there was no evidence of a consistent and statistically significant effect of initiating anticonvulsants that highly induce cytochrome P450 activity on ischemic coronary or cerebrovascular outcomes compared with other agents, given routine care utilization patterns.
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Keywords
Stroke, anticonvulsant drugs, claims data, cohort study, myocardial infarction, stroke
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