Psoriasis May Not Be an Independent Predictor for the Use of Cardiovascular and Anti-diabetic Drugs: A 5-year Prevalence Study

Authors

  • Marlies Wakkee
  • Willemijn Meijer
  • H.A. Martino Neumann
  • Ron M.C. Herings
  • Tamar Nijsten

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.2340/00015555-0688

Keywords:

psoriasis, cardiovascular drugs, cardiovascular diseases, diabetes mellitus, surveillance bias, hypertension.

Abstract

Most studies investigating the association between psoriasis and cardiovascular disease have shown a significant relationship. This comparison study investigated the association between psoriasis and prevalent use of cardiovascular drugs. Drug exposure data for 1998 to 2006 were extracted from the Dutch PHARMO-Record Linkage System database. Psoriasis patients were selected using an algorithm of hospitalization and drug dispensing records specific for psoriasis and matched with controls for gender, age and time-period. From the records of 2.5 million Dutch residents, 9,804 (0.4%) psoriasis patients and 15,288 (0.6%) controls were selected. Psoriasis patients used significantly more anti-hypertensives, anti-coagulant and anti-platelet agents, digoxin, nitrates, lipid-lowering and anti-diabetic drugs than the reference population during a 5-year period observation. In a multiple linear regression model adjusting for the number of unique drugs used, psoriasis was no longer significantly associated with any of these drug classes. Psoriasis patients used more cardiovascular-related drugs, but surveillance bias appears to affect this association considerably.

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Published

2009-08-02

How to Cite

Wakkee, M., Meijer, W., Martino Neumann, H., Herings, R. M., & Nijsten, T. (2009). Psoriasis May Not Be an Independent Predictor for the Use of Cardiovascular and Anti-diabetic Drugs: A 5-year Prevalence Study. Acta Dermato-Venereologica, 89(5), 476–483. https://doi.org/10.2340/00015555-0688

Issue

Section

Articles