Methimazole Treatment and Risk of Acute Pancreatitis: A Population-based Cohort Study

Author:

Pecere Alessandro1ORCID,Caputo Marina2,Sarro Andrea1,Ucciero Andrealuna1,Zibetti Angelica1,Aimaretti Gianluca2,Marzullo Paolo23,Barone-Adesi Francesco1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Translational Medicine, Università del Piemonte Orientale, Novara, Italy

2. Endocrinology, Department of Translational Medicine, Università del Piemonte Orientale, Novara, Italy

3. Division of General Medicine, Ospedale S. Giuseppe, I.R.C.C.S. Istituto Auxologico Italiano, Verbania, Italy

Abstract

Abstract Context A warning has been recently issued by the European Medicine Agency (EMA) regarding a potential increased risk of acute pancreatitis (AP) in methimazole (MMI) users. Objective To investigate the association between MMI and the diagnosis of AP in a population-based study. Materials and Methods A retrospective analysis of administrative health databases was conducted (2013–2018). Relevant data were obtained from: (1) inhabitants registry, (2) hospital discharge records (ICD-9-CM 577.0), and (3) drug claims registry (ATC H03BB02). We evaluated AP risk in MMI users in 18 months of treatment, stratifying results by trimester. Poisson regression was used to estimate the age- and sex-adjusted rate ratios (RR), and the relative 95% confidence intervals (CI), comparing rates of AP between MMI users and nonusers. The absolute risk of AP in MMI users was also calculated. Results A total of 23 087 new users of MMI were identified. Among them, 61 hospitalizations occurred during the study period. An increase in AP risk was evident during the first 3 trimesters of therapy (RR 3.40 [95% CI: 2.12–5.48]; RR 2.40 [95% CI: 1.36–4.23]; RR 2.80 [95% CI: 1.66–4.73]), but disappeared thereafter. The AP absolute risk in MMI users during the first 18 months of treatment was less than 0.4% in all sex and age classes. Conclusions Our results support the EMA warning, suggesting an increased risk of AP associated with MMI use. However, such an increase seems limited to the first months of MMI treatment. Moreover, in absolute terms, the probability of AP is low among patients, well below 1%.

Publisher

The Endocrine Society

Subject

Biochemistry (medical),Clinical Biochemistry,Endocrinology,Biochemistry,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism

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1. Hyperthyroidism;The Lancet;2024-02

2. Carbimazole-associated Pancreatitis: Report From Western India;JCEM Case Reports;2023-12-15

3. Hyperthyroidism;JAMA;2023-10-17

4. Drug-Induced Acute Pancreatitis: An Evidence-Based Classification (Revised);Clinical and Translational Gastroenterology;2023-07-14

5. Autoimmune conditions and pancreatic cancer risk in older American adults;International Journal of Cancer;2022-09-05

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