Department of Gastroenterology and Hepatology, University Hospital Center Zagreb, Zagreb, Croatia.
Department of Pharmacology, Zagreb University School of Medicine, Zagreb, Croatia.
Br J Clin Pharmacol. 2023 Feb;89(2):787-831. doi: 10.1111/bcp.15525. Epub 2022 Oct 5.
To assess whether exposure to proton-pump inhibitors (PPIs) shortly preceding COVID-19 diagnosis affected the risk of subsequent hospitalizations and mortality.
This population-based study embraced first COVID-19 episodes in adults diagnosed up to 15 August 2021 in Croatia. Patients were classified based on exposure to PPIs and burden of PPI-requiring morbidities as nonusers (no issued prescriptions, no recorded treatment-requiring conditions between 1 January 2019 and COVID-19 diagnosis), possible users (no issued prescriptions, but morbidities present; self-medication possible) and users (≥1 prescription within 3 months prior to the COVID-19 diagnosis; morbidities present). Subsets were mutually exactly matched for pre-COVID-19 characteristics. The contrast between users and possible users informed about the effect of PPIs that is separate of the effect of PPI-requiring conditions.
Among 433 609 patients, users and possible users were matched 41 195 (of 55 098) to 17 334 (of 18 170) in the primary and 33 272 to 16 434 in the sensitivity analysis. There was no relevant difference between them regarding mortality (primary: relative risk [RR] = 0.93 [95% confidence interval 0.85-1.02; absolute risk difference [RD] = -0.34% [-0.73, 0.03]; sensitivity: RR = 0.88 [0.78-0.98]; RD = -0.45% [-0.80, -0.11]) or hospitalizations (primary: RR = 1.04 [0.97-1.13]; RD = 0.29% [-0.16, 0.73]; sensitivity: RR = 1.05 [0.97-1.15]; RD = 0.32% [-0.12, 0.75]). The risks of both were slightly higher in possible users or users than in nonusers (absolutely by ~0.4-1.6%) indicating the effect of PPI-requiring morbidities.
Premorbid exposure to PPIs does not affect the risk of death or hospitalization in adult COVID-19 patients, but PPI-requiring morbidities seemingly slightly increase the risk of both.
评估 COVID-19 诊断前短期使用质子泵抑制剂 (PPI) 是否会影响随后住院和死亡的风险。
本研究基于人群,纳入了 2021 年 8 月 15 日前在克罗地亚确诊的首例 COVID-19 成年患者。患者根据是否使用 PPI 以及是否存在需要 PPI 治疗的疾病分为非使用者(未开具处方,在 2019 年 1 月至 COVID-19 诊断期间无记录的治疗需求)、可能使用者(未开具处方,但存在疾病;可能自行用药)和使用者(在 COVID-19 诊断前 3 个月内开具了≥1 次处方;存在疾病)。亚组之间在 COVID-19 前特征方面是完全匹配的。使用者和可能使用者之间的差异反映了 PPI 治疗的效果,而与需要 PPI 治疗的疾病无关。
在 433609 名患者中,使用者和可能使用者在主要分析中分别匹配了 41195(55098 例)和 17334(18170 例),在敏感性分析中分别匹配了 33272 和 16434。在死亡率方面,两组之间没有显著差异(主要分析:相对风险 [RR] = 0.93 [95%置信区间 0.85-1.02;绝对风险差异 [RD] = -0.34% [-0.73, 0.03];敏感性分析:RR = 0.88 [0.78-0.98];RD = -0.45% [-0.80, -0.11])或住院率(主要分析:RR = 1.04 [0.97-1.13];RD = 0.29% [-0.16, 0.73];敏感性分析:RR = 1.05 [0.97-1.15];RD = 0.32% [-0.12, 0.75])。与非使用者相比,可能使用者或使用者的死亡率或住院率略高(绝对值增加约 0.4-1.6%),表明存在需要 PPI 治疗的疾病。
COVID-19 成年患者发病前使用 PPI 不会影响其死亡或住院风险,但需要 PPI 治疗的疾病似乎会略微增加这两种风险。