A new survey proves that
the 6% to 10% of Americans who use prescription sleep medications such as
zolpidem (Ambien), temazepam (Restoril), eszopiclone (Lunesta) and zaleplon
(Sonata) are more likely to develop cancer, and far more likely to die
prematurely, than those who take no sleep aids.
The increased rates kick in at really low levels too, the
study says. For those prescribed as few as one to 18 sleeping pills in a year,
deaths during the period of the new study were more than three and a half times
greater than for those who got no such prescriptions, the study says. And for
patients who took home the largest number of prescriptions for sleep aids--for
more than 132 pills per year--the risk of death was five times greater than
among those who appeared to take no sleep aids, according to the study.
Studies such as this one do not establish whether sleep
drugs are a cause of the increased cancers and deaths or whether, perhaps,
those who are at greater risk of dying or developing cancer are simply more
likely to seek a prescription for sleep problems. To establish such
cause-and-effect relationships, clinical trials, which would compare subjects
taking sleep medications against those taking a sham drug, would be necessary,
said study coauthor Dr. Daniel F. Kripke, a professor of psychiatry emeritus at
UC San Diego now affiliated with the Scripps Clinic in La Jolla.
In addition, the "all-cause mortality" used in the
study is a crude measure of a drug's risk, because the measure aggregates a
wide range of seemingly unrelated health crises: automobile accidents,
injuries, suicides, infectious diseases such as influenza, and chronic
conditions, including asthma, diabetes and cancer.
The study, released this week by the British medical
publication BMJ Open, found an increase in cancer incidence among those taking
sleep medications that was modest but statistically significant. Compared with
patients with no record of taking prescription sleeping pills, the study says,
those who were the heaviest users of prescription sleep aids were 35% more likely
to be diagnosed with cancer during the study period.
The use of sedative medications was a better predictor than
a participant's current smoking habit of whether he or she would develop
lymphoma or cancer of the lung, colon or prostate during the study period,
according to the research.
Conducted by researchers from Scripps and the Jackson Hole Center for Preventive
Medicine in Jackson, Wy., the study tracked 10,531 patients given prescriptions
for hypnotic sedatives for at least three months and for as long as four years.
For comparison, researchers matched each patient prescribed with a sleep aid
with at least two patients of similar age, gender and health status who had no
record of having had sleep aids prescribed.
Zolpidem--sold as Ambien--was the most widely used
prescription sleep medication used by study participants, followed by Restoril,
the research says. But 4,117 of the participants got prescriptions for other
sleep aids, including Lunesta, Sonata, benzodiazepines, barbituates and sedative
antihistamines.
Given the millions of Americans for whom prescription sleep
medication is a routine habit, the authors estimate that in 2010 alone, 320,000
to 507,000 deaths in the United States may have been associated with
prescription sleep-aid use. Despite evidence that they may not add much to a
night's sleep, Americans in 2010 filled some 66 million prescriptions for
"hypnotics and sedatives," according to IMS Health, which tracks drug
trends. That makes sleep aids the 20th most used class of prescription
therapies.
Kripke acknowledged
he was "very shocked" by the higher cancer levels he found in this
large population. "I suspect people who work for the manufacturers of
these drugs might be shocked too."
Sanofi-Aventis, the maker of Ambien, said Tuesday in a
statement that the BMJ Open study had limitations beyond those acknowledged by
its authors. The company called the study's conclusions "highly
questionable," and cited its average follow-up of 2.5 years as
insufficient to detect whether cancers were new, and might be the result of
sleep aids, or whether they had already taken hold at the time a patient got a
prescription for sleep problems.
Kripke agreed that cause and effect had not been established
but underscored that a litany of studies have stirred concern about the safety
of sleep medications, including research that was submitted to the Food and
Drug Administration when some of these drugs were approved.
Kripke said that beyond their common role in fatal
medication overdoses, there's evidence that widely used sleep medications raise
risks for many ills: "hangover" effects dull alertness and cognitive
performance, which may lead to accidents and injuries; studies (including this
one) have found that gastroesophageal regurgitation and peptic ulcers are more
common among those taking sleep aids, which could drive up rates of infection
and of cancer; other studies have linked sleep aids' use with depression and sleep apnea, which in turn
raise risks of suicide, diabetes and heart disease.
As for how sleep medicine could be linked to cancer, that is
harder to discern. A 2008 study by Kripke on rodents found hypnotics to have a
carcinogenic effect, and suggested they can cause chromosomal damage. But human
studies have been more mixed.
For those who rely on prescription sleep drugs to get to
sleep and stay asleep, Kripke, a specialist in sleep disorders and their
treatment, said that changes in "sleep hygiene" can make a
difference, as can cognitive-behavioral therapy. But he added that many--especially
older patients-- who lean on sleep aids should know that they may function
perfectly well with a little less sleep, and that medications do not add large
chunks of sleep-time to a night's rest anyway.
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