Excess Mortality in Aspirin and Dipyrone (Metamizole) Co-Medicated in Patients With Cardiovascular Disease: A Nationwide Study

Background Pain is a major issue in our aging society. Dipyrone (metamizole) is one of the most frequently used analgesics. Additionally, it has been shown to impair pharmacodynamic response to aspirin as measured by platelet function tests. However, it is not known how this laboratory effect transl...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of the American Heart Association 2021-11, Vol.10 (22), p.e022299-e022299
Hauptverfasser: Polzin, Amin, Dannenberg, Lisa, Helten, Carolin, Pöhl, Martin, Metzen, Daniel, Mourikis, Philipp, Dücker, Christof, Marschall, Ursula, L'Hoest, Helmut, Hennig, Beata, Zako, Saif, Trojovsky, Kajetan, Petzold, Tobias, Jung, Christian, Levkau, Bodo, Zeus, Tobias, Schrör, Karsten, Hohlfeld, Thomas, Kelm, Malte
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Background Pain is a major issue in our aging society. Dipyrone (metamizole) is one of the most frequently used analgesics. Additionally, it has been shown to impair pharmacodynamic response to aspirin as measured by platelet function tests. However, it is not known how this laboratory effect translates to clinical outcome. Methods and Results We conducted a nationwide analysis of a health insurance database in Germany comprising 9.2 million patients. All patients with a cardiovascular event in 2014 and subsequent secondary prevention with aspirin were followed up for 36 months. Inverse probability of treatment weighting analysis was conducted to investigate the rate of mortality, myocardial infarction, and stroke/transient ischemic attack between patients on aspirin-dipyrone co-medication compared with aspirin-alone medication. Permanent aspirin-alone medication was given to 26,200 patients, and 5946 patients received aspirin-dipyrone co-medication. In the inverse probability of treatment weighted sample, excess mortality in aspirin-dipyrone co-medicated patients was observed (15.6% in aspirin-only group versus 24.4% in the co-medicated group, hazard ratio [HR], 1.66 [95% CI, 1.56-1.76],
ISSN:2047-9980
2047-9980
DOI:10.1161/JAHA.121.022299