Potential increased risk of cancer from commonly used medications: an umbrella review of meta-analyses

Several commonly used medications have been associated with increased cancer risk in the literature. Here, we evaluated the strength and consistency of these claims in published meta-analyses. We carried out an umbrella review of 74 meta-analysis articles addressing the association of commonly used...

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Veröffentlicht in:Annals of oncology 2014-01, Vol.25 (1), p.16-23
Hauptverfasser: Ioannidis, J.P.A., Zhou, Y., Chang, C.Q., Schully, S.D., Khoury, M.J., Freedman, A.N.
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container_end_page 23
container_issue 1
container_start_page 16
container_title Annals of oncology
container_volume 25
creator Ioannidis, J.P.A.
Zhou, Y.
Chang, C.Q.
Schully, S.D.
Khoury, M.J.
Freedman, A.N.
description Several commonly used medications have been associated with increased cancer risk in the literature. Here, we evaluated the strength and consistency of these claims in published meta-analyses. We carried out an umbrella review of 74 meta-analysis articles addressing the association of commonly used medications (antidiabetics, antihyperlipidemics, antihypertensives, antirheumatics, drugs for osteoporosis, and others) with cancer risk where at least one meta-analysis in the medication class included some data from randomized trials. Overall, 51 articles found no statistically significant differences, 13 found some decreased cancer risk, and 11 found some increased risk (one reported both increased and decreased risks). The 11 meta-analyses that found some increased risks reported 16 increased risk estimates, of which 5 pertained to overall cancer and 11 to site-specific cancer. Six of the 16 estimates were derived from randomized trials and 10 from observational data. Estimates of increased risk were strongly inversely correlated with the amount of evidence (number of cancer cases) (Spearman's correlation coefficient = -0.77, P < 0.001). In 4 of the 16 topics, another meta-analysis existed that was larger (n = 2) or included better controlled data (n = 2) and in all 4 cases there was no statistically significantly increased risk of malignancy. No medication or class had substantial and consistent evidence for increased risk of malignancy. However, for most medications we cannot exclude small risks or risks in population subsets. Such risks are unlikely to be possible to document robustly unless very large, collaborative studies with standardized analyses and no selective reporting are carried out.
doi_str_mv 10.1093/annonc/mdt372
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subjects Antihypertensive Agents - adverse effects
Antineoplastic agents
Antirheumatic Agents - adverse effects
Biological and medical sciences
Bone Density Conservation Agents - adverse effects
cancer
Humans
Hypoglycemic Agents - adverse effects
Hypolipidemic Agents - adverse effects
Medical sciences
meta-analysis
Meta-Analysis as Topic
Multiple tumors. Solid tumors. Tumors in childhood (general aspects)
Neoplasms - chemically induced
Observational Studies as Topic
pharmacoepidemiology
Pharmacology. Drug treatments
Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic
randomized trials
review
Reviews
Risk
Tumors
title Potential increased risk of cancer from commonly used medications: an umbrella review of meta-analyses
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