Department of Infectious Diseases, University Medical Center Ljubljana, Ljubljana, Slovenia.
Faculty of Medicine, University of Ljubljana, Ljubljana, Slovenia.
PLoS One. 2018 Oct 4;13(10):e0204773. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0204773. eCollection 2018.
Although statins have anti-inflammatory and potentially also antimicrobial (including antiviral) activity, their therapeutic impact on infectious diseases is controversial. In this study, we evaluated whether pre-existing statin use influenced the course and outcome of tick-borne encephalitis.
To assess the influence of statin usage on the severity of acute illness and the outcome of tick-borne encephalitis, univariate and multivariable analyses were performed for 700 adult patients with tick-borne encephalitis of whom 77 (11%) were being treated with statins, and for 410 patients of whom 53 (13%) were receiving statins, respectively.
Multivariable analyses found no statistically significant association between statin usage and having a milder acute illness. There was also no statistically significant benefit with respect to a favorable outcome defined by the absence of post-encephalitic syndrome (ORs for a favorable outcome at 6 months was 0.96, 95% CI: 0.46-2.04, P = 0.926; at 12 months 0.29, 95% CI: 0.06-1.33, P = 0.111; at 2-7 years after acute illness 0.44, 95% CI: 0.09-2.22, P = 0.321), by a reduction in the frequency of six nonspecific symptoms (fatigue, myalgia/arthralgia memory disturbances, headache, concentration disturbances, irritability) occurring during the 4 week period before the last examination, or by higher SF-36 scores in any of the eight separate domains of health as well as in the physical and mental global overall component. Furthermore, there were no significant differences between patients receiving statins and those who were not in the cerebrospinal fluid or serum levels for any of the 24 cytokines/chemokines measured.
In this observational study, we could not prove that pre-existing use of statins affected either the severity of the acute illness or the long-term outcome of tick-borne encephalitis.
尽管他汀类药物具有抗炎作用,并且可能具有抗菌(包括抗病毒)作用,但它们对传染病的治疗作用仍存在争议。本研究评估了他汀类药物的预先使用是否会影响蜱传脑炎的病程和结局。
为了评估他汀类药物使用对急性疾病严重程度和蜱传脑炎结局的影响,对 700 例成人蜱传脑炎患者进行了单变量和多变量分析,其中 77 例(11%)正在接受他汀类药物治疗,对 410 例患者进行了多变量分析,其中 53 例(13%)正在接受他汀类药物治疗。
多变量分析发现,他汀类药物使用与较轻的急性疾病之间没有统计学显著关联。他汀类药物治疗也与无脑炎后综合征定义的良好结局没有统计学显著获益相关(6 个月时良好结局的优势比为 0.96,95%CI:0.46-2.04,P=0.926;12 个月时为 0.29,95%CI:0.06-1.33,P=0.111;急性疾病后 2-7 年时为 0.44,95%CI:0.09-2.22,P=0.321),也不能减少在最后一次检查前 4 周内发生的 6 种非特异性症状(疲劳、肌痛/关节炎、记忆力障碍、头痛、注意力障碍、烦躁不安)的频率,也不能提高任何 8 个单独健康领域或身体和精神总体综合领域的 SF-36 评分。此外,在接受他汀类药物治疗的患者和未接受他汀类药物治疗的患者之间,在测量的 24 种细胞因子/趋化因子的任何一种的脑脊液或血清水平方面,都没有显著差异。
在本观察性研究中,我们无法证明预先使用他汀类药物会影响蜱传脑炎的急性疾病严重程度或长期结局。