Volume 60, Issue 4 pp. 382-386
Clinical Research Article

Statin-induced myasthenia: A disproportionality analysis of the WHO's VigiBase pharmacovigilance database

Valerie Gras-Champel Pharm D, PhD

Valerie Gras-Champel Pharm D, PhD

Regional Pharmacovigilance Centre, Division of Clinical Pharmacology, Amiens University Hospital, Amiens, France

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Benjamin Batteux MD

Benjamin Batteux MD

Regional Pharmacovigilance Centre, Division of Clinical Pharmacology, Amiens University Hospital, Amiens, France

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Kamel Masmoudi MD

Kamel Masmoudi MD

Regional Pharmacovigilance Centre, Division of Clinical Pharmacology, Amiens University Hospital, Amiens, France

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Sophie Liabeuf Pharm D, PhD

Corresponding Author

Sophie Liabeuf Pharm D, PhD

Regional Pharmacovigilance Centre, Division of Clinical Pharmacology, Amiens University Hospital, Amiens, France

Correspondence

Professor Sophie Liabeuf, CHU Amiens Picardie, Service de pharmacologie, F-80054 Amiens, France.

Email: [email protected]

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First published: 12 July 2019
Citations: 22

Abstract

Background

Statins have been linked to myasthenia gravis (MG) in recent case reports. However, MG is not currently listed as an adverse drug reaction (ADR) in the summary of product characteristics.

Methods

We performed case/noncase analyses in VigiBase® (the World Health Organization international database of suspected ADR) to identify a signal of MG (expressed as the reporting odds ratio [ROR] and its 95% confidence interval [CI]) for statins.

Results

A total of 3967 reports mentioned MG. Of these, 169 were suspected to be statin-induced. A disproportionality signal was found for MG and statins use (ROR [95%CI] = 2.66 [2.28–3.10]).

Conclusions

The present disproportionality analysis revealed a possible drug safety signal linking MG and statins. This potential signal is weak, and is offset by the cardiovascular benefits of statins. Clinicians should be aware of this potential ADR, because it may require consideration of statin withdrawal or treatment of MG.

CONFLICT OF INTEREST

None of the authors has any conflict of interest to disclose.

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