Tleyjeh Imad M, Kashour Tarek, Hakim Fayaz A, Zimmerman Valerie A, Erwin Patricia J, Sutton Alex J, Ibrahim Talal
Department of Medicine, King Fahd Medical City, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.
Arch Intern Med. 2009 Oct 12;169(18):1658-67. doi: 10.1001/archinternmed.2009.286.
Emerging epidemiological evidence suggests that statin use may reduce the risk of infections and infection-related complications. Our objective was to examine the association between statin use and the risk of infections and related outcomes.
We searched several electronic databases from inception through December 2007 for randomized trials and cohort studies that examined the association between statin use and the risk or outcome of infections. Data on study characteristics, measurement of statin use, outcomes (adjusted for potential confounders), and quality assessment were extracted.
Sixteen cohorts were eligible and differed in representativeness, outcome assessment, and comparability of exposed (statin) and unexposed (nonstatin) groups. Nine cohorts addressed the role of statins in treating infections: bacteremia (n = 3), pneumonia (n = 3), sepsis (n = 2), and bacterial infection (n = 1). The pooled adjusted effect estimate was 0.55 (95% confidence interval, 0.36-0.83; I(2) = 76.5%) in favor of statins. Seven cohorts addressed infection prevention in patients with vascular diseases (n = 3), chronic kidney disease (n = 1), diabetes (n = 1), intensive care unit-acquired infections (n = 1), and in general practice (n = 1). The pooled effect estimate was 0.57 (95% confidence interval, 0.43-0.75; I(2) = 82%) in favor of statin use; there was some evidence of publication bias for this analysis (Egger test; P = .07). Meta-regression did not identify potential effect modifiers that explain the between-study heterogeneity.
Results for our meta-analysis suggest that statin use may be associated with a beneficial effect in treating and preventing different infections. Given the presence of heterogeneity and publication bias, there is a need for randomized trials to confirm the benefit of statin use in this context.
新出现的流行病学证据表明,使用他汀类药物可能降低感染及感染相关并发症的风险。我们的目的是研究他汀类药物使用与感染风险及相关结局之间的关联。
我们检索了多个电子数据库,涵盖从数据库建立至2007年12月期间的随机试验和队列研究,这些研究探讨了他汀类药物使用与感染风险或结局之间的关联。提取了有关研究特征、他汀类药物使用的测量方法、结局(对潜在混杂因素进行校正)以及质量评估的数据。
16个队列符合要求,在代表性、结局评估以及暴露组(他汀类药物)和非暴露组(非他汀类药物)的可比性方面存在差异。9个队列探讨了他汀类药物在治疗感染中的作用:菌血症(n = 3)、肺炎(n = 3)、脓毒症(n = 2)和细菌感染(n = 1)。汇总的校正效应估计值为0.55(95%置信区间,0.36 - 0.83;I² = 76.5%),支持他汀类药物。7个队列探讨了血管疾病患者(n = 3)、慢性肾病患者(n = 1)、糖尿病患者(n = 1)、重症监护病房获得性感染患者(n = 1)以及普通患者(n = 1)中感染的预防。汇总效应估计值为0.57(95%置信区间,0.43 - 0.75;I² = 82%),支持使用他汀类药物;该分析存在一些发表偏倚的证据(Egger检验;P = 0.07)。Meta回归未识别出可解释研究间异质性的潜在效应修饰因素。
我们的Meta分析结果表明,使用他汀类药物可能在治疗和预防不同感染方面具有有益作用。鉴于存在异质性和发表偏倚,需要进行随机试验来证实在此背景下使用他汀类药物的益处。