A study by the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine has suggested that taking statins could help prevent people dying from pneumonia.
The researchers found that the risk of death in the six-month period after diagnosis of pneumonia was substantially lower among those who were already receiving the cholesterol-lowering drugs compared with those who were not.
Previous studies have suggested that statins may be associated with a more favourable outcome after bacterial infection.
This study supports a possible protective effect of statins against mortality in patients with pneumonia.
But the researchers point out that as they looked at patients who were already taking the medication when they developed pneumonia, a randomised clinical trial is needed to determine whether starting a statin at the time of diagnosis has a similar effect
The team of epidemiologists used data from The Health Improvement Network (THIN), a database of computerised medical records of doctors' practices in the UK, to identify statin users for the study.
They matched each statin user, who were aged over 40 at first prescription of a statin between 1995 and 2006, with up to five non-statin users.
Patients with a record of pneumonia were followed for six months to see if they died and the scientists found that 13 percent (109 out of 847) of statin users died compared with 20 percent (578 out of 2927) of non-statin users.
While the study tried to minimise confounding variables, the researchers point out that they cannot rule out the possibility that unknown differences between statin users and non-users could have contributed to the results.
Lead author Dr Ian Douglas, lecturer in epidemiology at LSHTM, said: "Statins are safe, cheap, and an easy intervention in terms of delivery.
"Given the potential low number needed to treat to prevent a death suggested by this study, we believe that a strong case exists for randomised trials of statins in people with serious infection to determine if a simple and practical intervention at the point of diagnosis of pneumonia has a beneficial effect."
The study has been published online in the BMJ.
Most Popular
- Live! IPL spot-fixing shame: Mumbai police serves summons to Gurunath Meiyappan - 20 hours ago
- Nod for quadricycle boosts sole maker Bajaj Auto - 21 hours ago
- Sreesanth may claim innocence but - 21 hours ago
- Soldier hacked to death in London street in suspected Islamist attack, Nigerian link possible - 22 hours ago
- 28-year-old Mumbai woman hangs herself while her boyfriend watches via webcam - 19 hours ago
- Bride killed on eve of wedding, but who's the killer? - 18 hours ago
- After Aishwarya Rai-Bachchan, Vidya Balan, Ameesha Patel adds Bollywood tadka to red carpet at Cannes - 11 hours ago
- MS Dhoni's wife Sakshi tweets tounge-in-cheek Bollywood song that appears to be IPL spot-fixing comment - 8 hours ago
- Aila! Salman Khan and Aamir Khan together! - 17 hours ago
- Review: Fast & Furious 6 is director Justin Lin's biggest canvas in the series - 13 hours ago
















