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Increased risk of mycotic infections associated with sodium-glucose co-transporter 2 inhibitors: a prescription sequence symmetry analysis.

Citation
Adimadhyam, S., et al. “Increased Risk Of Mycotic Infections Associated With Sodium-Glucose Co-Transporter 2 Inhibitors: A Prescription Sequence Symmetry Analysis.”. British Journal Of Clinical Pharmacology, pp. 160-168.
Center University of Chicago
Author Sruthi Adimadhyam, Glen T Schumock, Gregory S Calip, Daphne E Smith Marsh, Brian T Layden, Todd A Lee
Keywords diabetes, drug safety, evidence-based medicine, pharmacoepidemiology
Abstract

AIMS: To determine the risk of mycotic infections associated with the use of sodium-glucose co-transporter 2 inhibitors (SGLT2i) in a real-world setting.

METHODS: We conducted a prescription sequence symmetry analysis using data from Truven Health MarketScan (2009-2015). We selected continuously enrolled patients newly initiating both an SGLT2i and an antifungal between 1 April 2013 and 31 December 2015 within time periods of 30, 60, 90, 180 or 365 days of each other. Adjusted sequence ratios (ASR) were calculated for each time period as the ratio of patients initiating SGLT2i first over those initiating an antifungal first adjusted for time trends in prescribing. Analyses were stratified by sex and type of SGLT2i.

RESULTS: There were 23 276 patients who newly initiated both SGLT2i and an antifungal in our study period. These patients were further classified into those initiating the two drugs within 365 (n = 17 504), 180 (n = 11 873), 90 (n = 7697), 60 (n = 5856) or 30 (n = 3650) days of each other. Increased risks of mycotic infections were present across all time periods, with the strongest effect observed in the 90-day interval [ASR 1.53 (confidence interval, CI 1.43-1.60)]. Findings differed by sex [90-day ASR females: 1.65 (CI 1.56-1.74); males 1.25 (CI 1.14-1.36)] and by SGLT2i [90-day ASR canagliflozin 1.57 (CI 1.49-1.66); non-canagliflozin 1.42 (CI 1.31-1.55)].

CONCLUSION: Initiation of SGLT2i was associated with an increased risk for mycotic infections. Findings from this commercially insured population in the real world are consistent with evidence available from clinical trials.

Year of Publication
2019
Journal
British journal of clinical pharmacology
Volume
85
Issue
1
Number of Pages
160-168
Date Published
12/2019
ISSN Number
1365-2125
DOI
10.1111/bcp.13782
Alternate Journal
Br J Clin Pharmacol
PMID
30294925
PMCID
PMC6303242
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