January 2005
Drug increases pneumonia risk
Rheumatoid arthritis patients taking the commonly
prescribed steroid prednisone, run a significantly higher risk of
contracting pneumonia than do those on biologic medications, according to
research presented at the American College of Rheumatology's Annual
Scientific Meeting.
But biologic drugs, such as adalimumab (HUMIRAT),
etanercept (Enbrel) and infliximab (Remicade), aren't without their own
risks. The drugs, which copy the effects of substances naturally made by the
body's immune system, have been associated with increased rates of infection
during clinical trials.
To compare the risks of biologic therapy with
prednisone use, researchers conducted a two‑and‑a‑half‑year study of
responses to questionnaires from 15,966 long‑term arthritis patients, whose
average age was 60.5 years.
Participants who used biologic drugs were 30% more
likely to get pneumonia; those on prednisone were 170% more likely.
Therefore prednisone, the corticosteroid most often prescribed to treat
inflammation, poses a much larger risk, researchers concluded.
SOURCE: “Prednisone May Be a High Risk
Factor for Pneumonia in Rheumatoid Arthritis Patients,” The American College
of Rheumatology, Oct. 15, 2004.