Исследование влияния НПВС на сердечнососудистую систему
Автор работы: Пользователь скрыл имя, 27 Марта 2014 в 23:39, доклад
Краткое описание
Цель проанализировать имеющиеся данные о сердечно-сосудистых безопасности нестероидные противовоспалительные препараты. Проектирование Сетевой мета-анализ. Источники данных Библиографических баз данных, материалы конференций, исследование регистров, Пищевых продуктов и медикаментов веб-сайт, ссылка списки соответствующих статей и докладов с указанием соответствующих статей через Science Citation Index (последнее обновление июля 2009 года). Производители целекоксиб и lumiracoxib предоставил дополнительные данные.
Cardiovascular
safety of non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs: network meta-analysis
BMJ 2011; 342 doi: http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmj.c7086 (Published
11 January 2011)
Cite this as: BMJ 2011;342:c7086
Abstract
Objective To analyse the available evidence on cardiovascular
safety of non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs.
Design Network meta-analysis.
Data sources Bibliographic databases, conference proceedings, study
registers, the Food and Drug Administration website, reference lists
of relevant articles, and reports citing relevant articles through the
Science Citation Index (last update July 2009). Manufacturers of celecoxib
and lumiracoxib provided additional data.
Study selection All large scale randomised controlled trials comparing
any non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug with other non-steroidal anti-inflammatory
drugs or placebo. Two investigators independently assessed eligibility.
Data extraction The primary outcome was myocardial infarction. Secondary
outcomes included stroke, death from cardiovascular disease, and death
from any cause. Two investigators independently extracted data.
Data synthesis 31 trials in 116 429 patients with more than 115 000
patient years of follow-up were included. Patients were allocated to
naproxen, ibuprofen, diclofenac, celecoxib, etoricoxib, rofecoxib, lumiracoxib,
or placebo. Compared with placebo, rofecoxib was associated with the
highest risk of myocardial infarction (rate ratio 2.12, 95% credibility
interval 1.26 to 3.56), followed by lumiracoxib (2.00, 0.71 to 6.21).
Ibuprofen was associated with the highest risk of stroke (3.36, 1.00
to 11.6), followed by diclofenac (2.86, 1.09 to 8.36). Etoricoxib (4.07,
1.23 to 15.7) and diclofenac (3.98, 1.48 to 12.7) were associated with
the highest risk of cardiovascular death.
Conclusions Although uncertainty remains, little evidence exists
to suggest that any of the investigated drugs are safe in cardiovascular
terms. Naproxen seemed least harmful. Cardiovascular risk needs to be
taken into account when prescribing any non-steroidal anti-inflammatory
drug.
Introduction
Non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs
(NSAIDs) have been the cornerstone of pain management in patients with
osteoarthritis and other painful conditions. In the United States an
estimated 5% of all visits to a doctor are related to prescriptions
of non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs and they are among the most
commonly used drugs.1 2 In 2004, rofecoxib, marketed as a
cyclo-oxygenase-2 (COX 2) selective inhibitor, was withdrawn from the
market after the results of a randomised placebo controlled trial3 showed an increased risk of cardiovascular
events associated with the drug. This finding was confirmed in other
trials and a cumulative meta-analysis.4 Since then debate has surrounded
the cardiovascular safety of cyclo-oxygenase-2 selective inhibitors,
followed by similar concerns about traditional non-steroidal anti-inflammatory
drugs.5 More recently, the US Food and Drug
Administration decided against the approval of etoricoxib because of
its inadequate risk-benefit profile.6
These debates and the patchwork of
evidence resulting from multiple trials and cohort studies have unsettled
practising clinicians.7 Several standard meta-analyses were
unable to resolve the debate because they failed to integrate all available
randomised evidence in one analysis. Network meta-analysis allows a
unified, coherent analysis of all randomised controlled trials that
compare non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs head to head or with placebo
while fully respecting randomisation.8 9 We analysed the cardiovascular safety
of non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs by integrating all available
direct and indirect evidence in network meta-analyses.
Methods
We considered large scale randomised
controlled trials comparing any non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug
with other non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, paracetamol (acetaminophen),
or placebo for any medical condition. To be included, trials required
at least two arms with at least 100 patient years of follow-up. In the
case of trials with several arms, we included only arms with at least
100 patient years of follow-up. We excluded trials in patients with
cancer. For an intervention to be included in our analyses, at least
10 patients allocated to the intervention had to have had a myocardial
infarction in all eligible trials combined.
Trial identification
and data collection
We searched bibliographic databases,
relevant conference proceedings, study registers, and the FDA website,
manually searched reference lists of relevant articles, and retrieved
reports citing relevant articles through the Science Citation Index
(see web extra appendix 1). The search was last updated in July 2009.
Two investigators independently assessed trials for eligibility and
extracted data. If a trial was covered in more than one report we used
a hierarchy of data sources: reports to the FDA, peer reviewed articles,
reports from the web based repository for results of clinical studies www.clinicalstudyresults.org, published abstracts, and other sources, such as
trial websites. Finally, we contacted all authors of primary trial reports
and manufacturers of relevant non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs
(Pfizer, Merck, Novartis) for missing outcome data. One independent
investigator10 and two manufacturers (Pfizer and
Novartis) provided additional information.
Outcome measures
The prespecified primary outcome
was fatal or non-fatal myocardial infarction. Secondary outcomes were
haemorrhagic or ischaemic fatal or non-fatal stroke; cardiovascular
death, defined as any death due to cardiovascular causes (for example,
myocardial infarction, low output failure, fatal arrhythmia, pulmonary
embolism, stroke), and death of unknown cause; death from any cause;
and the Antiplatelet Trialists’ Collaboration composite outcome11 of non-fatal myocardial infarction,
non-fatal stroke, or cardiovascular death.
Statistical analysis
Whenever possible we used results
from intention to treat analysis of the longest follow-up available.
We excluded comparisons with zero events in both groups from the relevant
analysis since such comparisons provide no information on the magnitude
of the treatment effect.12 We used a Bayesian random effects
model, which fully preserves randomised treatment comparisons within
trials.9 13 14Analyses were done using Markov chain
Monte Carlo methods with minimally informative prior distributions.
As measures of treatment effects, we calculated rate ratios based on
patient years. We estimated rate ratios from the median of the posterior
distribution as well as corresponding 95% credibility intervals. In
the presence of minimally informative priors, credibility intervals
can be interpreted like conventional confidence intervals. Rate ratios
below 1 indicate a detrimental effect of the control intervention throughout.
Finally, we calculated confidence levels, defined as the posterior probability
that an increase in risk is smaller than a specified threshold.15 Confidence levels take into account
both the magnitude of the pooled rate ratio and the corresponding uncertainty.
Precise estimates are more informative and result in sharp increases
in the confidence that the rate ratio of a drug does not exceed a specified
threshold. When the specified threshold of the rate ratio increases,
imprecise estimates that are based on low numbers of events are uninformative
and lead to slow increases in confidence and relevant uncertainty even
for large rate ratios. We prespecified a rate ratio of 1.3 as the primary
threshold, which was used as non-inferiority margin in the Multinational
Etoricoxib and Diclofenac Arthritis Long-term (MEDAL) programme.16 We used linear regression to test
for each outcome whether there was any association with cyclo-oxygenase-2
selectivity (data only shown in web extra appendix 2).
We assessed the goodness of fit of
the model to the data by calculating the residual deviance,9 the heterogeneity of treatment effects
estimated from the median between trial variance τ2 observed in the
posterior distribution, and the consistency of the network determined
by use of inconsistency factors,17 defined as the difference in log
rate ratios derived from direct and indirect comparisons. To check the
robustness of our analyses, we calculated Bayesian random effects meta-analyses
for all available direct comparisons and carried out several sensitivity
analyses, including a restriction to trials in patients with musculoskeletal
conditions (data shown in web extra appendix 2). For all analyses we
used Stata release 10, and WinBUGS version 1.4 (MRC Biostatistics Unit,
Cambridge, UK). Web extra appendix 1 provides further details of the
methods used.
Results
Thirty one randomised controlled
trials evaluating seven different non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs
were included in the analyses (table 1⇓, fig 1⇓). Celecoxib was investigated most (15 trials) and
compared with five different interventions. Ibuprofen was evaluated
least (two trials) and compared with two different interventions, whereas
etoricoxib was evaluated in three trials but compared with only one
intervention. Etoricoxib and diclofenac had the largest number of patient
years of follow-up (26 025 and 27 819 overall, respectively), whereas
ibuprofen had the lowest number of patient years of follow-up (4832
overall). In total, 116 429 patients with 117 218 patient years
of follow-up were covered in the analysis of the primary outcome (table
2⇓). The methodological quality of included trials was
generally high with all but two having adequate concealment of allocation,
all having adequate blinding of patients and investigators, 16 having
independent event adjudication, and 13 including all randomised patients
in the analysis (table 1).
Fig 1 Network of comparisons included
in analyses. Solid lines represent direct comparisons within randomised
controlled trials. Numbers denote trials comparing corresponding interventions,
with overall number of patient years of follow-up in brackets
Myocardial infarction
Twenty nine trials with 554 accumulated
events contributed to the analysis of myocardial infarction (table 2).
For three of the preparations (naproxen, diclofenac, and etoricoxib)
evidence was lacking for an increased risk of myocardial infarction
compared with placebo (fig 2⇓). All other drugs seemed to be associated with an
increased risk compared with placebo. Estimated rate ratios were greater
than 1.3 for ibuprofen (1.61, 95% credibility interval 0.50 to 5.77),
celecoxib (1.35, 0.71 to 2.72), rofecoxib (2.12, 1.26 to 3.56), and
lumiracoxib (2.00, 0.71 to 6.21).
Fig 2 Estimates of rate ratios for non-steroidal
anti-inflammatory drugs compared with placebo. NSAID=non-steroidal anti-inflammatory
drug; APTC=Antiplatelet Trialists’ Collaboration
Stroke
Twenty six trials with 377 accumulated
events contributed to the analysis of stroke (table 2). All drugs seemed
to be associated with an increased risk compared with placebo (fig 2).
Estimated rate ratios were greater than 1.3 for naproxen (1.76, 0.91
to 3.33), ibuprofen (3.36, 1.00 to 11.60), diclofenac (2.86, 1.09 to
8.36), etoricoxib (2.67, 0.82 to 8.72), and lumiracoxib (2.81, 1.05
to 7.48).
Cardiovascular
death
Twenty six trials with 312 accumulated
events contributed to the analysis of cardiovascular death, accounting
for 46% of all deaths (table 2). All drugs except naproxen showed some
evidence for an increased risk of cardiovascular death compared with
placebo (fig 2). The estimated rate ratios for cardiovascular death
were greater than 1.3 for ibuprofen (2.39, 0.69 to 8.64), diclofenac
(3.98, 1.48 to 12.70), celecoxib (2.07, 0.98 to 4.55), etoricoxib (4.07,
1.23 to 15.70), rofecoxib (1.58, 0.88 to 2.84), and lumiracoxib (1.89,
0.64 to 7.09).
Death from any
cause
Twenty eight trials with 676 accumulated
events contributed to the analysis on overall mortality (table 2). All
the drugs seemed to be associated with increased risks of death from
any cause compared with placebo (fig 2). The estimated rate ratios were
greater than 1.3 for ibuprofen (1.77, 0.73 to 4.30), diclofenac (2.31,
1.00 to 4.95), celecoxib (1.50, 0.96 to 2.54), etoricoxib (2.29, 0.94
to 5.71), rofecoxib (1.56, 1.04 to 2.23), and lumiracoxib (1.75, 0.78
to 4.17).
Thirty trials with 1091 accumulated
events contributed to the analysis on the Antiplatelet Trialists’
Collaboration composite outcome (table 2). All drugs seemed to be associated
with increased risks of the composite of non-fatal myocardial infarction,
non-fatal stroke, or cardiovascular death compared with placebo (fig
2). The estimated rate ratios were greater than 1.3 for ibuprofen (2.26,
1.11 to 4.89), diclofenac (1.60, 0.85 to 2.99), celecoxib (1.43, 0.94
to 2.16), etoricoxib (1.53, 0.74 to 3.17), rofecoxib (1.44, 1.00 to
1.99), and lumiracoxib (2.04, 1.13 to 4.24). Figure 3⇓presents an overview of pairwise
comparisons (rate ratios with 95% credibility intervals) of all drugs
on all outcomes.
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Fig 3 Estimates of rate ratios for all
possible comparisons of non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs. APTC=Antiplatelet
Trialists’ Collaboration composite outcome
Posterior probabilities
Figure 4⇓ presents posterior probability curves with resulting
confidence levels for the different drugs compared with placebo and
different outcomes. For example, the probability that rofecoxib increases
the risk of myocardial infarction by less than 30% is 3% or conversely
there is 97% confidence that rofecoxib increases the risk by at least
30% (corresponding to a rate ratio of 1.3). The curves can also be used
to examine the overall pattern of available evidence of a specific drug.
For example, the relatively steep increases in all but one of the posterior
probability curves for naproxen points to the robust evidence available
for naproxen. In contrast, the relatively flat curves for etoricoxib
indicate a relative lack of available evidence. However, the mostly
large effects seen for etoricoxib (indicated by the right shift of the
curves) nevertheless allow conclusions for clinically relevant risk
increases.
Fig 4 Posterior probabilities for specified
rate ratios. Curves can be used to extract a probability corresponding
to a specified minimally clinically relevant rate ratio or to extract
a minimal rate ratio corresponding to a specified probability or confidence
level. For example, an increase in risk for myocardial infarction of
at least 20% (rate ratio of at least 1.2) may be considered clinically
relevant. The curve for naproxen indicates that the probability of the
drug being associated with a rate ratio below this threshold is about
83%. Conversely, a probability of 90% may be considered as appropriate
evidence for the outcome stroke. The curve for celecoxib indicates that
someone can be 90% confident that celecoxib increases the risk for stroke
by no more than 65% (rate ratio of 1.65). APTC=Antiplatelet Trialists’
Collaboration
Evaluation of
models, variation, and sensitivity analyses
The model fit was good for all outcomes
(see web extra appendix 2). Estimates of statistical heterogeneity between
direct comparisons were generally low, except for myocardial infarction
(range of τ2 across outcomes:
0.03 to 0.12; see web extra appendix 2). Inconsistency between direct
and indirect comparisons was low for all outcomes (range of median inconsistency
factors 2% to 29%; see web extra appendix 2). However, given the relatively
low number of trials and events, relevant heterogeneity or inconsistency
between trials could not be ruled out. Detailed results of the sensitivity
analyses are presented in web extra appendix 2: results were all compatible
with main analyses. Many of the estimates were imprecise, however, and
do not allow for firm conclusions to be drawn.
Discussion
In this network meta-analysis of
cardiovascular safety data of seven non-steroidal anti-inflammatory
drugs and placebo, naproxen seemed least harmful (fig 3). Safety profiles
of individual drugs varied considerably depending on the outcome, and
estimated rate ratios for comparisons with placebo were generally imprecise.
Non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs are mainly used for symptomatic
treatment of musculoskeletal conditions. Clearly, as for any symptomatic
treatment, doing more harm than good with this class of drugs should
be avoided (primum non nocere). Taking this into account, we presented
confidence levels (fig 4), which can be interpreted as confidence that
a drug is associated with an increase in risk that is smaller than a
specified threshold. For the primary outcome of myocardial infarction,
the confidence that the increase in risk associated with the evaluated
non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs does not exceed 30% (the risk
increase used as non-inferiority margin in the Multinational Etoricoxib
and Diclofenac Arthritis Long-term programme 16) is sufficiently high only for naproxen.
Conversely, we are confident that several other drugs—ibuprofen, diclofenac,
etoricoxib, and lumiracoxib—are associated with a risk increase of
more than 30% on several cardiovascular outcomes.
Although our analysis covered more
than 100 000 patient years of follow-up, the number of events for
most outcomes was low and our estimates of rate ratios imprecise, as
indicated by wide credibility intervals. Given the low event rates in
the included trials, establishing the cardiovascular safety of a preparation
with sufficient precision would require a trial with more than 100 000
patients followed up for at least one year. Such a large trial may be
difficult to carry out, considering the limited amount of funding available
and the inherent ethical problems. Although estimated rate ratios indicated
harmful effects in most drugs on the majority of outcomes, conventional
levels of statistical significance were reached in about 30% of comparisons
with placebo. Absence of statistically robust evidence of a harmful
effect should not be confused with evidence of absence of cardiovascular
toxicity for the evaluated drugs.18 Posterior probabilities may increase
our understanding of cardiovascular safety data in this situation and
allow for different notions about what constitutes a clinically relevant
increase in risk. Most will agree that a rate ratio of 1.3 indicates
a clinically relevant increase in risk as was used as the upper bound
of the non-inferiority margin by studies in the Multinational Etoricoxib
and Diclofenac Arthritis Long-term programme,16 and we are confident that several
drugs are associated with a risk increase higher than this margin for
several outcomes.
Some may argue that absolute rates
of events were low and clinically irrelevant, despite increases in rate
ratios. Event rates in the included trials are considerably lower than
in routine clinical settings.4 Numbers needed to harm are therefore
lower in routine settings than in most trial populations. The estimated
rate ratios observed in our study will translate into clinically relevant
numbers needed to harm in most routine populations of patients taking
non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, who are typically at moderate
to high risks for cardiovascular events.19
Strengths and
weaknesses of the meta-analysis
Our analysis has several limitations.
Firstly, we were unable to consider all non-steroidal anti-inflammatory
drugs in our analysis: large scale randomised controlled trials are
lacking for most of the older drugs and even for some newer ones, such
as valdecoxib or meloxicam. Nevertheless, we were able to include all
relevant cyclo-oxygenase-2 inhibitors, except valdecoxib, and the three
most commonly used traditional non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs.20 21 By disregarding small studies we
minimised the risk of small study effects.22 Small studies would have had minimal
impact on the analysis anyway, because of low numbers of events.23Secondly, we were able to obtain
unpublished data only for the trials of celecoxib and lumiracoxib, whereas
Merck, the manufacturer of rofecoxib and etoricoxib, was not willing
to provide unpublished safety data. Therefore some data were missing
for trials sponsored by Merck. This is disconcerting in the light of
the safety concerns raised by our analysis for both drugs, rofecoxib
and etoricoxib, manufactured by Merck. Thirdly, the quality of our analysis
is limited by the quality of the underlying data. Although the methodological
quality of included trials was generally satisfactory, the quality of
reporting was often less than optimal24 and we found discrepancies in the
reported number of events between different sources of information for
major trials including ADVANTAGE (Assessment of Differences between
Vioxx and Naproxen To Ascertain Gastrointestinal Tolerability and Effectiveness),
VIGOR (Vioxx Gastrointestinal Outcomes Research), and APPROVe (Adenomatous
Polyp Prevention on Vioxx).3 25 26 27 Several trials lacked independent
adjudication of events, therefore bias in either direction cannot be
excluded, including bias towards the null owing to non-differential
misclassification of events or assessor bias in trials without independent
adjudication.4 23Nevertheless, the analysis restricted
to trials with independent adjudication of events supported the robustness
of our main analysis (see web extra appendix 2). Fourthly, one study
explored the effects of dosage and regimen in a pooled analysis of six
randomised placebo controlled trials of celecoxib and found that lower
dosages and once daily regimens that avoided continuous interference
of the drug with prostaglandin metabolism were associated with lower
relative risks for the cardiovascular composite outcome than higher
dosages and twice daily regimens.28 We were unable to satisfactorily
deal with these matters in our analysis mainly because of the complexity
of the network and the low number of patients treated with low dosages.
In addition, regimens used in clinical practice might differ from the
regimens used in the included clinical trials. Intermittent usage seems
to be more common in clinical practice than the chronic long term usage
in the trials, resulting in less intense drug use.29 Because none of the trials used intermittent
regimens and drugs were used for at least one year in most of the trials
we were unable to investigate the impact of drug use on cardiovascular
outcomes. Data from the General Practice Research Database indicate,
however, that about half of the patients have patterns of drug intake
comparable to those evaluated in the trials included in this network
meta-analysis,29 and we submit that the results of
our study are applicable to these patients. Finally, we carried out
several sensitivity analyses to determine the robustness of the results.
Unfortunately, owing to the low number of accumulated events, estimates
from these analyses were imprecise and do not allow any meaningful conclusion.
This is particularly true for the analysis restricted to patients with
musculoskeletal conditions: many of the point estimates could not be
derived at all and others seemed to contradict the main results, but
credibility intervals were compatible with both, major benefits or detrimental
harms.
We used a comprehensive search strategy
and searched pertinent sources to retrieve potentially eligible randomised
controlled trials.30 It therefore seems unlikely that
we missed any relevant trial. Using network meta-analysis we were able
to integrate all available randomised evidence on the cardiovascular
safety of non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs in one analysis while
fully preserving randomisation.31 The integration of direct and indirect
comparisons results in a gain of statistical precision compared with
previous analyses4 23 and allows for formal comparisons
of non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs with placebo. In the most comprehensive
analysis to date, one study compared five cyclo-oxygenase-2 selective
inhibitors with placebo using conventional techniques.23 They found all estimates of relative
risks of cardiovascular death imprecise and largely overlapping the
null effect line, compatible with substantial harms or benefits. In
contrast, our estimates were more precise compared with that study,
which estimated a nearly identical rate ratio for the comparison of
etoricoxib and placebo for the outcome cardiovascular death (rate ratio
4.4 v 4.07 in our analysis).
However, the confidence interval in that meta-analysis ranged from 0.2
to 119 whereas our credibility interval ranged from 1.23 to 15.7, providing
stronger evidence for increases in the risk of cardiovascular death.
Also, wide confidence intervals around estimates for lumiracoxib did
not allow for a conclusion on any of the outcomes in their analysis.
In contrast, our analysis provided smaller intervals, and posterior
probabilities indicated a high probability that lumiracoxib is associated
with a clinically relevant increase in risk of cardiovascular outcomes.
Comparison with
other studies
Our study confirms previous notions
of regulatory bodies, mainly based on observational evidence, that all
non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs are associated with an increased
risk of cardiovascular adverse effects.32 33Observational evidence is likely
to be affected by confounding by indication.34 Our results are based on randomised
evidence and we therefore believe that our study provides the best available
evidence on the safety of this class of drugs. Nevertheless, our results
are mostly compatible with the results of a meta-analysis of observational
studies—for example, for naproxen, diclofenac, or rofecoxib—although
some differences exist, especially for ibuprofen.5 Besides confounding by indication,
these differences might be explained not only by differences in drug
use between trials and observational studies29 but also by the quality of observational
studies, which lead to high heterogeneity between studies and a possible
underestimation of effects.5 35
We found no clear relation between
specificity of cyclo-oxygenase-2 inhibitors and risk of cardiovascular
events. This finding contrasts with previous claims that increased selectivity
for cyclo-oxygenase-2 inhibitors is associated with increased cardiovascular
risk.36 Several mechanisms have been postulated,
but the hypothesis of an imbalance between prostacyclin and thromboxane
A2 leading to an increased risk for thombotic events gained most
prominence.37 However, the lack of a clear association
between specificity of cyclo-oxygenase-2 inhibitors and cardiovascular
risk implies that other mechanisms need to be considered. Multiple effects
most probably contribute to the increased risk of cardiovascular events,
including differential effects on prostacyclin and thromboxane A2 synthesis,37endothelial function and nitric oxide
production,38 blood pressure,39 volume retention and other renal
effects.40 In addition, differences in pharmacokinetics
may contribute to the toxicity profile41; drugs with a long half life prescribed
once daily (such as rofecoxib) and drugs with a shorter half life prescribed
more than once daily (such as diclofenac) may be more likely to continuously
interfere with the cyclo-oxygenase system than drugs with a shorter
half life prescribed once daily (such as celecoxib).28
Implications and
conclusions
The observation that cardiovascular
risk is not clearly associated with specificity of cyclo-oxygenase-2
inhibitors implies that no prediction of cardiovascular risk can be
made based on such specificity. Therefore the use of other non-steroidal
anti-inflammatory drugs not covered by our analysis should be reconsidered,
as well as the over the counter availability of non-steroidal anti-inflammatory
drugs such as diclofenac or ibuprofen. In general, naproxen seems to
be the safest analgesic for patients with osteoarthritis in cardiovascular
terms but this advantage has to be weighed against gastrointestinal
toxicity and the need for concomitant prescription of a proton pump
inhibitor in many patients. In the light of the results of one study,28celecoxib 400 mg prescribed once
daily may be considered as an alternative option. Other alternatives
include paracetamol and opioids. Compared with placebo, however, paracetamol
results in only a small reduction in pain and may be associated with
clinically relevant hepatotoxicity, even in dosages recommended for
musculoskeletal pain.42 43 The analgesic effect of opioids is
somewhat more pronounced but outweighed by large increases in the risk
of adverse events.44 In conclusion, the options for the
treatment of chronic musculoskeletal pain are limited and patients and
clinicians need to be aware that cardiovascular risk needs to be taken
into account when prescribing.