31 research outputs found
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Population scale data reveals the antidepressant effects of ketamine and other therapeutics approved for non-psychiatric indications.
Current therapeutic approaches to depression fail for millions of patients due to lag in clinical response and non-adherence. Here we provide new support for the antidepressant effect of an anesthetic drug, ketamine, by Inverse-Frequency Analysis of eight million reports from the FDA Adverse Effect Reporting System. The results of the examination of population scale data revealed that patients who received ketamine had significantly lower frequency of reports of depression than patients who took any other combination of drugs for pain. The analysis also revealed that patients who took ketamine had significantly lower frequency of reports of pain and opioid induced side effects, implying ketamine's potential to act as a beneficial adjunct agent in pain management pharmacotherapy. Further, the Inverse-Frequency Analysis methodology provides robust statistical support for the antidepressant action of other currently approved therapeutics including diclofenac and minocycline
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Retrospective analysis reveals significant association of hypoglycemia with tramadol and methadone in contrast to other opioids.
Tramadol is one of the most commonly used analgesics worldwide, classified as having a low abuse potential by U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency, and often recommended in pain management guidelines. Its pain-relieving mechanism of action is attributed to mild μ-opioid receptor agonism, serotonin and norepinephrine mediated nociception modulation, and N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor, NMDAR, antagonism. However, recent case reports and case-control studies have shown an association between tramadol use and hypoglycemia. The growing concern over increasing tramadol use and unexpected side effects warranted a further comparative and quantitative analysis of tramadol adverse reactions. In this study we analyzed over twelve million reports from United States Food and Drug Administration Adverse Event Reporting System and provided evidence of increased propensity for hypoglycemia in patients taking tramadol when compared to patients taking other opioids, serotonin-norepinephrine reuptake inhibitors, and drugs affecting NMDAR activity. Additionally, we identified that only methadone from the opioid cohort behaves similarly to tramadol and has an association with hypoglycemia
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Proton-pump inhibitor use is associated with a broad spectrum of neurological adverse events including impaired hearing, vision, and memory.
Proton-pump inhibitors, PPIs, are considered effective therapy for stomach acid suppression due to their irreversible inhibition of the hydrogen/potassium pump in the gastric parietal cells. They are widely prescribed and are considered safe for over-the-counter use. Recent studies have shown an association between PPI use and Alzheimer dementia, while others have disputed that connection. We analyzed over ten million United States Food and Drug Administration Adverse Event Reporting System reports, including over forty thousand reports containing PPIs, and provided evidence of increased propensity for memory impairment among PPI reports when compared to histamine-2 receptor antagonist control group. Furthermore, we found significant associations of PPI use with a wide range of neurological adverse reactions including, migraine, several peripheral neuropathies, and visual and auditory neurosensory abnormalities
Publisher Correction: Population scale data reveals the antidepressant effects of ketamine and other therapeutics approved for non-psychiatric indications.
A correction to this article has been published and is linked from the HTML version of this paper. The error has not been fixed in the paper
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Anti-TNF-α therapy induced psoriasis in rheumatoid arthritis patients according to FDA postmarketing surveillance data
Rheumatoid arthritis, RA, is a chronic autoimmune disease characterized by joint pain, tenderness, swelling, and stiffness. This disease affects nearly 1% of the world population. RA predominates in females and typically develops between the ages of 30 and 50 years. Common therapeutics for the treatment of RA include immune system suppressants such as tumor necrosis factor, or TNF, inhibitors. There is growing concern related to multiple clinical cases reporting an unexpected onset of psoriasis following the use of TNF inhibitors. This adverse event is counterintuitive since some tumor necrosis factor inhibitors are indicated for the treatment of plaque psoriasis. In this study, we analyzed over 880 thousand postmarketing safety reports from patients being treated for RA with a single therapeutic and provided evidence for a statistically significant association of psoriasis adverse events with TNF inhibitor use as compared to methotrexate. Additionally, we quantified the reported odds ratios and their 95% confidence intervals between four individual TNF inhibitors and found that the degree of association with psoriasis was variable among the drugs studied, with certolizumab pegol exhibiting the highest reported risk