Excess sudden cardiac deaths after short-term clarithromycin administration in the CLARICOR trial: Why is this so, and why are statins protective?

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Abstract

Objectives: To elucidate potential mechanisms for the clarithromycin- induced excess mortality observed in the CLARICOR trial during 2.6 year follow-up of patients with stable coronary artery disease. Methods: Cox analyses using out-of-hospital death as a proxy for sudden death compared to in-hospital (nonsudden) death. Result: In 100 of 189 (53%) cardiovascular (CV) deaths in which it was possible to examine the question, there was a strong association between place of death and the classification of CV death as sudden or not-sudden. The excess mortality in the clarithromycin group was confined to sudden CV death in patients not on statins at trial entry (HR: 2.61, 95% CI: 1.69-4.05, p < 0.0005). Other categories of deaths showed no marked drug-placebo difference. Conclusions: Short-term clarithromycin administration was significantly associated with increased risk of sudden CV death in stable coronary heart disease patients not using statins. Copyright © 2011 S. Karger AG, Basel.

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Winkel, P., Hilden, J., Fischer Hansen, J., Hildebrandt, P., Kastrup, J., Kolmos, H. J., … Jensen, G. B. (2011). Excess sudden cardiac deaths after short-term clarithromycin administration in the CLARICOR trial: Why is this so, and why are statins protective? Cardiology, 118(1), 63–67. https://doi.org/10.1159/000324533

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