American
Heart Association Scientific Statement: AHA
statement recommends doctors change approach to
prescribing pain relievers for patients with or at
risk for heart disease
DALLAS, Feb. 27 /PRNewswire/ --
Many doctors should change the way they prescribe
pain relievers for chronic pain in patients with or
at risk for heart disease based on accumulated
evidence that nonsteroidal anti- inflammatory drugs
(NSAIDs), with the exception of aspirin, increase
risk for heart attack and stroke, according to an
American Heart Association statement published today
in Circulation: Journal of the American Heart
Association.
"We believe that some
physicians have been prescribing the new COX-2
inhibitors as the first line of treatment. We are
turning that around and saying that, for chronic
pain in patients with known heart disease or who are
at risk for heart disease, these drugs should be the
last line of treatment," said Elliott M. Antman,
M.D., FAHA, lead author of the American Heart
Association scientific statement and Professor of
Medicine at Harvard Medical School and Brigham and
Women's Hospital.
"We advise physicians to start
with non-pharmacologic treatments such as physical
therapy and exercise, weight loss to reduce stress
on joints, and heat or cold therapy. If the
non-pharmacologic approach does not provide enough
pain relief or control of symptoms, we recommend a
stepped-care approach when it comes to prescribing
drugs," he added. "Take into account the patient's
health history and consider acetaminophen, aspirin
and even short-term use of narcotic analgesics as
the first step. If further relief is needed,
physicians should suggest the least selective COX-2
inhibitors first, moving progressively toward more
selective COX-2 inhibitors, which are at the bottom
of the list, only if needed. All drugs should be
used at the lowest dose necessary to control
symptoms and prescribed for the shortest time
possible."
Drugs in the NSAIDs class work
by inhibiting cyclooxygenase (COX), an enzyme system
that comes in two major forms: COX-1, which the body
produces constantly in most tissues, and COX-2,
produced during the body's inflammatory response.
Because COX-1 is also protective of the
gastrointestinal (GI) tract, long-term use of drugs
that suppress COX-1, such as aspirin, have been
associated with gastrointestinal complications,
including ulcers. "Selective" COX-2 inhibitors were
developed to avoid the GI complications of
traditional NSAIDs, not because they had advantages
in terms of pain relief, Antman explained.
However, multiple studies have
indicated an increased risk of cardiovascular
disease (CVD) complications from COX-2 selective
NSAIDS, particularly in patients with prior CVD or
risk factors for CVD.
"Recent studies indicate that
the cells lining the blood vessels have more of the
COX-2 enzyme than initially thought. So it's
possible that inhibiting the COX-2 pathway can make
a person's blood more likely to clot. There is also
an increase in sodium and water retention, which in
turn could worsen heart failure and produce high
blood pressure," Antman explained. "The more you
inhibit COX-1, the greater the increase in GI risk;
the more you inhibit COX-2 the greater the
cardiovascular risk."
The scientific statement comes
two years after the association released the last
one on the issue. It was prompted, in part, by new
analyses indicating that the increased
cardiovascular risk associated with COX-2 selective
NSAIDs may also extend to less selective traditional
NSAIDs.
The statement includes details
from a meta-analysis indicating that, compared with
placebo, COX-2 selective drugs seem to increase the
risk of a heart attack by about 86 percent. The
statement also points out that two common NSAIDs
traditionally thought of as non-selective --
diclofenac and ibuprofen -- appear to increase the
relative risk of cardiovascular disease. In the last
two years, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration
(FDA) added warning statements to NSAIDs, other than
aspirin, pointing out the increased risk for
cardiovascular events.
One non-selective NSAID,
naproxen, did not seem to increase CVD risk in these
analyses. However, Antman pointed out that although
naproxen appeared safer than the other NSAIDs,
relatively few studies have been done with naproxen
and doctors should continue to be cautious about
prescribing it as well, pending more information.
"This is a fast-moving field
with new information available from multiple
sources. We feel the most important thing the
American Heart Association can do is to give
practical advice to clinicians who treat cardiac
patients with pain every day," said Antman.
Because there are so many drugs
in the NSAID class and because they can affect
either COX-1 or COX-2 or both, it is very important
to know where a given drug falls in the range of
selectivity, particularly when evaluating the
results of head-to-head comparisons of different
drugs, Antman said. The statement contains guidance
that helps doctors see where individual drugs lie on
the continuum of COX-1 versus COX-2 selectivity.
Selective COX-2 inhibitors have
been in the news since the FDA removed the selective
COX-2 inhibitor, rofecoxib, from the market in 2004.
Since then, other COX-2 selective drugs have been
removed from the market in the United States and
other countries. One selective COX-2 inhibitor,
celecoxib, remains on the market, but warnings on it
were strengthened and the FDA advised that patients
with a history of CVD or risk factors for CVD should
be informed of the possibility of increased risks
from long-term use, Antman said.
Co-authors include: Joel S.
Bennett, M.D.; Alan Daugherty, Ph.D., D.Sc., FAHA;
Curt Furberg, M.D., Ph.D., FAHA; Harold Roberts,
M.D., FAHA and Kathryn A. Taubert, Ph.D., FAHA.