On 2016 Aug 05, David Keller commented:
Advice to avoid PPI medication is premature until major confounding by the use of aluminum antacids is eliminated
"The avoidance of PPI medication may prevent the development of dementia." So begins the widely-quoted conclusion of this study by Gomm, Haenisch and colleagues. The evidence I presented in my letter to JAMA-Neurology [1] along with its effect on their study was "addressed", as Haenisch claims, but in a manner I would characterize as completely dismissive and devoid of information.
To recapitulate, my letter pointed out that Haenisch' group had not corrected their results for chronic aluminum exposure. A recent meta-analysis of 8 case-control and cohort studies of over 10,500 subjects, showed a significant 71% increase in risk of Alzheimer dementia for subjects with chronic aluminum exposure. [2] Are these findings by Wang and colleagues not applicable for some reason?
Aluminum salts are the active ingredients of most immediately-effective over-the-counter antacids (calcium-based antacids are less effective, and antihistamines are slowly effective). Haenisch found a 44% increase in dementia for subjects taking proton pump inhibitors (PPIs), compared with subjects not taking them. However, patients taking a PPI for upper GI acid symptoms are more likely than are controls to have taken aluminum-based antacids (such as Maalox, Mylanta, Rolaids and many others). In the USA, physicians routinely inquire about the use of such antacids by patients suspected of having upper GI acid disorders.
Subjects taking PPIs logically must therefore be more likely to have a history of chronic aluminum exposure due to OTC antacid use than controls, and the 71% higher risk of dementia from their aluminum exposure is greater than the 44% increase found by Haenisch in association with PPI use. Attribution of increased risk for dementia to PPI use therefore requires correction of her dataset for exposure to aluminum antacids.
Haenisch stated "we were not able to include aluminum-containing antacids as these drugs are often not covered by the statutory health insurance in Germany". That was not how I learned epidemiology should be practiced, from a German epidemiology professor who goes out in work boots to collect the data herself if it is missing.
Therefore, the recommendation by Haenisch to avoid PPI use seems premature and should be withdrawn, as a public safety measure, until someone can truly address the following question: how much of the risk associated with PPI use is likely to be attributable to the use of aluminum-based antacids? Otherwise, we may witness an upsurge in peptic ulcer disease as patients and physicians prematurely embrace Haenisch' conclusions.
References
1: Keller DL. Proton Pump Inhibitors and Dementia Incidence. JAMA Neurol. 2016 Jun 20. doi: 10.1001/jamaneurol.2016.1488. [Epub ahead of print] PubMed PMID:27323287.
2: Wang Z, Wei X, Yang J, Suo J, Chen J, Liu X, Zhao X. Chronic exposure to aluminum and risk of Alzheimer's disease: A meta-analysis. Neurosci Lett. 2016 Jan 1;610:200-6. doi:10.1016/j.neulet.2015.11.014. Epub 2015 Nov 27. PubMed PMID: 26592479.
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