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Behavioral Pediatrics

C. difficile Diarrhea Can Be Linked to PPIs, FDA Says

By: DOUG BRUNK, Rheumatology News Digital Network

The Food and Drug Administration today released a drug safety communication about proton pump inhibitors (PPIs) through its MedWatch Safety Information and Adverse Reporting Program, telling the public that Clostridium difficile–associated diarrhea can be associated with use of PPIs.

The PPI products listed in the communication are AcipHex (rabeprazole sodium); Dexilant (dexlansoprazole); Nexium (esomeprazole magnesium); omeprazole over-the-counter (OTC), Prevacid (lansoprazole) and OTC Prevacid 24hr; Prilosec (omeprazole) and its OTC product, Protonix (pantoprazole sodium), Vimovo (esomeprazole magnesium and naproxen); and Zegerid (omeprazole and sodium bicarbonate) and its OTC product.

Courtesy CDC/Dr. Gilda Jones


The FDA has informed the public that taking proton pump inhibitors can lead to Clostridium difficile (above) diarrhea.

 

"Patients should immediately contact their healthcare professional and seek care if they take PPIs and develop diarrhea that does not improve," according to the communication.

It also recommends that clinicians consider a diagnosis of Clostridium difficile–associated diarrhea in PPI users with diarrhea that does not improve. "Advise patients to seek immediate care from a healthcare professional if they experience watery stool that does not go away, abdominal pain, and fever while taking PPIs," the communication reads. "Patients should use the lowest dose and shortest duration of PPI therapy appropriate to the condition being treated."

In an interview, Dr. David Abend, who practices family medicine and osteopathic manipulative treatment in Oradell, N.J., said that the FDA notice surprised him. "Quite frankly, it’s pretty distressing, because usually you think upper GI issues with these medications, not lower GI issues," he said. "These are really good medications when they’re used correctly. It’s good we have an alert like this, but it doesn’t mean people should freak out and stop using these medications."

To listen to a podcast concerning Clostridium dificile-associated diarrhea and PPI's, click on the "Listen" button below. Podcast courtesy of the FDA.

"Many of the purported adverse properties attributed to PPIs have not been confirmed, and some are questionable," Dr. M. Michael Wolfe, a gastroenterologist, told this news organization. "For example, it is difficult to mechanistically attribute an increase in Clostridium difficile infection to the suppression of acid secretion by PPIs when the organism is transmitted by acid-resistant spores. Rather, this purported adverse property may be [an artifact] and potentially attributable to the use of PPIs in individuals with more serious systemic diseases," said Dr. Wolfe, who chairs the Case Western Reserve University department of medicine at MetroHealth Medical Center, Cleveland.

Serious adverse events associated with these and other drugs should be reported to the FDA’s MedWatch program at 800-332-1088.

02/08/12  

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