Proton-pump inhibitors (PPIs) are used to treat heartburn (stomach acid indigestion). NPR is reporting on the dangers of PPIs following a recent study that links them to chronic kidney disease [Abstract] (DOI: 10.1001/jamainternmed.2015.7193).
Many people have trouble discontinuing PPIs because the amount of acid in their digestive systems surges when they stop taking the drug. [...] "The teaching for many years was that these drugs were quite safe," says John Clarke, a gastroenterologist at Johns Hopkins Hospital in Baltimore. "But there is data that's emerging that suggests PPIs may not be as safe as we think they are."
An estimated 15 million Americans use PPIs, which are sold by prescription and over the counter under a variety of brand names, including Nexium, Prilosec and Prevacid. They work by blocking production of stomach acid. And that could be the root of the problem, according to Clarke. Stomach acid helps digest food and also has a "barrier function against different pathogens which are ingested," he says. So when there's less stomach acid, it leaves people vulnerable to nutritional deficiencies and infections, including food poisoning like salmonella, a serious, sometimes life-threatening digestive system infection called Clostridium difficile, and perhaps pneumonia.
In addition, one recent study suggested people who take PPIs may be at greater risk of heart disease; another suggested they could increase the risk for chronic kidney disease. As this evidence has emerged, Clarke says, "It's imperative that people who take these drugs look at the risks versus benefits in their individual case and make sure the safety concerns are being looked at closely and people don't use these drugs lightly."
[Continues...]
Many people take PPIs when they don't really need them, Clarke says. They could get rid of their heartburn by making lifestyle changes, such as losing weight and cutting back on alcohol, caffeine and spicy and fatty foods. And many people stay on them a lot longer than they need them, he says. PPIs are usually supposed to be taken for two to eight weeks, although doctors may recommend more.
The companies that make PPIs say they're safe for most people if they use them the way they're supposed to. And doctors say many people really need to take a PPI for severe heartburn. "Proton pump inhibitors do have some very positive benefits to patients," says Kenneth DeVault, a gastroenterologist at the Mayo Clinic who is president of the American College of Gastroenterology. "They relieve symptoms better than any other medication that has ever been developed." The most important "positive effect of proton pump inhibitors is restoration of a quality of life," DeVault says. "This is probably the big one." PPIs may also reduce the risk for esophogeal cancer for some people, he says.
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday February 16 2016, @12:27PM
"Ulcers aren't directly caused by acid in the stomach, rather the H. Pylori bacterium thrives in an acidic environment."
That's a strong statement and one that isn't *quite* backed up by evidence. A much safer statement is that in the region of 70-80% of ulcers are strongly linked with helicobacter pylori. Something like 5% are linked straight with cancers. The others are of unknown cause - the most we can say is that external factors such as, but possibly not including, alcohol and stress appear to exacerbate a potentially pre-existing problem. I know this, because I had a duodenal ulcer which first exhibited symptoms on a Saturday and tore itself open by the Tuesday evening. Obviously the hospital ran tests on the bit of stomach that they cut out of me, along with all the samples from my stomach they had at the time and in subsequent tests - no (unexpected) sign of H. bacter, no sign of cancer.
As a result I'm still on PPIs myself. 20mg omeprazole daily for the last six years. Joy.