Statins, commonly coprescribed drugs, and concomitant risk factors: A protective, neutral, or harmful association with common cancer types development: A 10-year multicentric retrospective lebanese study

Author:

Chalhoub Issam G.1,Boulos Rita T.1,Dagher Yara G.1,El Helou Sandra1,Haifa Karen G.1,Atallah Bachir2,Nasr Fadi13,Kassab Issam4,Chahine Mirna N.156

Affiliation:

1. Faculty of Medical Sciences, Lebanese University, Hadath, Lebanon

2. Statistics, Lebanese University, Hadath, Lebanon

3. Hematology-Oncology Department, Hotel Dieu de France, Achrafieh, Beirut, Lebanon

4. National Center of Pharmacovigilance, Faculty of Pharmacy, Lebanese University, Hadath, Lebanon

5. Basic Sciences Department, Faculty of Medical Sciences, Lebanese University, Hadath, Lebanon

6. Foundation-Medical Research Institutes (F-MRI), Beirut, Lebanon/Geneva, Switzerland.

Abstract

Elevated blood levels of low-density lipoprotein cholesterol are a major cardiovascular risk factor, and cholesterol-lowering drugs are among the most prescribed drugs worldwide. Cancer is the second leading cause of death after cardiovascular diseases. The relationship between cancer development and statins intake is controversial, and there are no clear studies in Lebanon and the Middle East concerning this topic. Hence, our study aimed to search for any possible association of statin intake as well as other medications (proton pump inhibitors [PPI], metformin, Aspirin, Angiotensin-Converting Enzyme inhibitors, and fenofibrate) with lung, colorectal cancer (CRC), and bladder cancer development in the Lebanese population. A retrospective study was performed on 709 subjects divided into 2 main groups: control (no cancer ± statin intake), and cases (either lung, or colorectal, or bladder cancer ± statin intake). Collected data included the age and gender of the patient, socioeconomic status, presence of cardiovascular disease and comorbidities, cancer risk factors, and the intake type, dose, and duration of statins. Bivariate, multivariate, and binary logistic analyses were enrolled. Out of 709 participants, 63.2% were males and 75% were cancer-positive (24.1%: lung cancer, 26.7%: CRC, 24.1%: bladder cancer). The overall intake of statins was not shown to significantly affect cancer development. However, a duration-response relationship was established between Simvastatin and lung cancer (odds ratio [OR]=1.208) as well as bladder cancer (OR=1.189). No significant association was found between each statin and CRC. Although PPIs intake was associated with a possibly harmful effect on lung cancer development (OR=3.42), it revealed a protective association with CRC development (OR=0.38). Other risk factors such as smoking and age were strongly associated (harmful) with lung and bladder cancer development. Physical inactivity and a family history of CRC were each associated with a harmful effect on CRC development. A harmful association with the development of lung and bladder cancer was found with the increasing duration of intake of Simvastatin. Other drugs such as PPIs and specific risk factors were also associated negatively or positively with the development of these 3 cancers. These findings should be validated by further investigations to guide clinicians on optimal treatment options for their patients.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

General Medicine

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