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In some hospitals, stroke patients are routinely given acid-suppressive therapy with proton-pump inhibitors (PPIs) or histamine-2–receptor antagonists (H2RAs) for “prophylaxis,” despite no evidence to support this practice. In fact, acid-suppressive therapy could be harmful, because observational data in various patient populations suggest an association with elevated risk for pneumonia. In this retrospective study from a Boston teaching hospital, researchers sought to determine whether acid-suppressive therapy in stroke patients was associated with excess risk for hospital-acquired pneumonia.
Among 1676 patients admitted with stroke (and hospitalized for at least 2 days) during a 10-year period, 80% received acid-suppressive therapy (usually PPIs). The incidence of hospital-acquired pneumonia was 17%. In multivariate analysis with adjustment for 30 potential confounders (including mechanical ventilation), PPI use was associated with significantly higher risk for pneumonia (odds ratio, 2.7); a smaller elevated risk with H2RA use (OR, 1.6) was not significant.
Herzig SJ et al. Acid-suppressive medication use in acute stroke and hospital-acquired pneumonia. Ann Neurol 2014 Nov; 76:712. (http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ana.24262)
Comment
Although residual confounding could be responsible these findings, they carry weight, because no proven benefit outweighs the potential harm. Another potential harm of routine acid suppression is predisposition to Clostridium difficile infection. Acid-suppressive drugs should not be prescribed to hospitalized stroke patients — or any hospitalized patient, for that matter — in the absence of an evidence-based indication.