Antihypertensive Therapy and Incidence of Cancer.
Sven Heiko LoosenDavid SchölerMark LueddeJohannes EschrichTom LueddeNiklas GremkeMatthias KalderKarel KostevChristoph RoderburgPublished in: Journal of clinical medicine (2022)
Background: Antihypertensive pharmacological therapy includes diuretics, beta-blockers, ACE inhibitors, calcium channel blockers and angiotensin II receptor blockers. Besides their use in arterial hypertension, these drugs also play a major role in the therapy of portal hypertension, heart failure and coronary artery disease. Systematic analyses on the possible influence of these medications on cancer incidence are lacking. Methods: By utilizing the Disease Analyzer database (IQVIA), 349,210 patients with antihypertensive drug prescriptions between 2010 and 2020 without a diagnosis of cancer prior to or at the date of initial drug prescription were included. Propensity score matching was carried out by 1:1:1:1:1 according to the five antihypertensive treatments. Cox regression analyses were performed to investigate an association between antihypertensive drugs and the incidence of cancer. Results: Patients who were diagnosed with cancer were treated with diuretics in 19.9% of cases, calcium channel blockers in 16.9% of cases, and angiotensin II receptor blockers, ACE inhibitors, or beta-blockers in 13.9%, 13.2% and 12.8% of cases, respectively. Cox regression models revealed that diuretic use positively correlated with liver cancer incidence (HR: 1.31, 95%CI: 1.12-2.63) and lymphoid/haematopoietic tissue cancer incidence (HR: 1.27, 95%CI: 1.10-1.46). Use of diuretics negatively correlated with the incidence of prostate (HR: 0.64, 95%CI: 0.53-0.78) and skin cancer (HR: 0.81, 95%CI: 0.72-0.92). Finally, a positive association was found between angiotensin II receptor inhibitors and prostate cancer incidence (HR: 1.50, 95%CI: 1.28-1.65). Conclusions: These data suggest that diuretic use might be associated with liver cancer and lymphoid/haematopoetic tissue cancer development.
Keyphrases
- angiotensin ii
- angiotensin converting enzyme
- papillary thyroid
- prostate cancer
- blood pressure
- risk factors
- squamous cell
- heart failure
- coronary artery disease
- emergency department
- lymph node metastasis
- coronary artery bypass grafting
- left ventricular
- arterial hypertension
- childhood cancer
- aortic valve
- cardiac resynchronization therapy
- benign prostatic hyperplasia