Background
Patients with COPD
are often prescribed statin drugs due to the increased prevalence of
cardiovascular disease. There is considerable debate about the
benefits conferred by statin drugs in patients with COPD. This study
evaluates the association of statin drug use with all-cause and
lung-related mortality in patients with COPD.
Methods
This study uses
population-based administrative data for the province of British
Columbia, Canada. A cohort of patients with COPD was identified based
on individual patient prescription records. Statin drug exposure was
ascertained in the 1-year period after the COPD diagnosis. The
primary and secondary outcomes, all-cause and lung-related mortality,
respectively, were evaluated in the 1-year period thereafter using
multivariate Cox proportional hazards models and several definitions
of medication exposure.
Results
There were 39,678
patients with COPD that met the study inclusion criteria. Of them,
7,775 (19.6%) had received at least one statin drug dispensed in the
exposure ascertainment window. There were 1,446 all-cause deaths
recorded in the cohort in the 1-year period after exposure
ascertainment. In multivariate analysis, the estimated hazard ratio
(HR) for statin drug exposure was 0.79 (95% CI, 0.68-0.92; P =
.0016), suggesting a 21% reduction in the risk from statin drug use
on all-cause mortality. For lung-related mortality, there was also a
considerable reduction in the risk for all-cause mortality from
statin drug use (HR, 0.55; 95% CI, 0.32-0.93; P = .0254). These
results were robust to different specifications of the exposure
ascertainment window.
Conclusions
This study shows
that statin drug use in a population-based cohort of patients with
COPD may confer benefits regarding reduced lung-related and all-cause
mortality.
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