Can Naproxen Help You Live Longer?

By Pat Anson, PNN Editor

There may be a hidden benefit to the pain reliever naproxen. The non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug (NSAID) is primarily used to treat arthritis, muscle aches and joint pain, but might also give a boost to your life expectancy, according to the results of a preliminary study.

An international research team analyzed 12-years of health records for over 500,000 people enrolled in the UK Biobank study to see if prescription drugs taken for at least 3 months were associated with higher or lower death rates. Over 400 medications were studied, with patients who were prescribed the drugs compared to control groups that didn’t take them.

“As expected, most drugs harbor a negative effect on lifespan, probably due to the underlying negative effect of the disease the drug is intended for. Importantly, a few drugs seem to have a beneficial effect on lifespan,” wrote lead author Alejandro Ocampo, PhD, a professor at the University of Lausanne and CEO of Epiterna, a Swiss company studying ways to slow the ageing process.        

Ocampo and his colleagues identified four medications associated with lower death rates:

  • Naproxen   

  • Atorvastatin (a statin)

  • Estradiol (female hormone replacement)

  • Sildenafil (Viagra)

Statins have long been known to reduce the risk of heart attack and stroke, while estradiol lowers the risk of osteoporosis and bone fractures in post-menopausal women. Sildenafil is well known for treating erectile dysfunction, but also improves cardiovascular health and may even protect against Alzheimer's disease. It’s easy to see how those drugs might increase life expectancy.

The inclusion of naproxen is a bit of a surprise. The active ingredient in Aleve and other over-the-counter pain relievers, naproxen raises the risk of a heart attack, stroke or internal bleeding when taken in high doses or used long-term. High doses of naproxen in 250mg and 500mg tablets are available by prescription, which is what people in the study were taking.

Even at those high doses, researchers found that naproxen was associated with a 10% lower death rate when compared to people who didn’t take the drug. The protective effect was strongest for men on naproxen, who had mortality rates that were 13% lower.

The findings are preliminary, have not been peer-reviewed, and don’t establish a cause-and-effect relationship. We don’t know why or how naproxen helps people live longer, only that it’s associated with a longer lifespan.  

Interestingly, the research team found that two other pain relievers – morphine and paracetamol (acetaminophen) – are associated with shorter lifespans. Again, this may have more to do with the underlying conditions the drugs were prescribed for, rather than the medications themselves.

Ocampo says more research and clinical studies are needed to get a better understanding of the long-term harms and benefits of medication.

“The benefit on lifespan observed for several drugs in this retrospective study could only be truly determined by performing randomized controlled trials. Such studies would aim at treating a healthy aging population with a drug during a sufficiently long follow-up to be able to observe the effect on all-cause mortality,” Ocampo wrote.

If the life expectancy benefits are proven, researchers say it could result in some drugs being “repurposed” as anti-aging treatments for otherwise healthy older adults.

FDA: 'Everyone May Be at Risk' from NSAIDs

By Pat Anson, Editor

Warning that "everyone may be at risk," the U.S. Food and Drug Administration has ordered warning labels for non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs(NSAIDs) to be strengthened to indicate they increase the risk of a fatal heart attack or stroke.

The warning applies to ibuprofen, Advil, Motrin and other popular pain relievers sold over-the-counter, as well as prescriptions drugs containing NSAIDs. Many multi-symptom cold and flu products also contain NSAIDs.

The agency said studies have shown the risk of serious side effects can occur in the first few weeks of using NSAIDs and could increase the longer people use the drugs. The revised warning does not apply to aspirin.

“There is no period of use shown to be without risk,” says Judy Racoosin, MD, deputy director of FDA’s Division of Anesthesia, Analgesia, and Addiction Products.

The FDA said people who have a history of heart disease, particularly those who recently had a heart attack or cardiac bypass surgery, are at the greatest risk for a serious cardiovascular event associated with NSAIDs. But the risk is also present for people who don't have heart problems.

“Everyone may be at risk – even people without an underlying risk for cardiovascular disease,” Racoosin said.

NSAIDs are widely used to treat everything from fever and headache to low back pain and arthritis. They are in so many different pain relieving products that health officials believe many consumers may not be aware how often they use NSAIDs. 

“Be careful not to take more than one product that contains an NSAID at a time,” said Karen Mahoney, MD, deputy director of FDA’s Division of Nonprescription Drug Products.

The labels for both prescription and over-the-counter NSAIDs already have information warning of heart attack and stroke risk. In the coming months, FDA will require drug manufacturers to update their labels with more specific information warning that the risk is heightened even in the first few weeks of use.

“Consumers must carefully read the Drug Facts label for all nonprescription drugs. Consumers should carefully consider whether the drug is right for them, and use the medicine only as directed. Take the lowest effective dose for the shortest amount of time possible," Mahoney said.

Several recent studies have found that NSAIDs increase the risk or heart attack and other health problems. The exact cause is unclear, but researchers believe NSAIDs may raise blood pressure and fluid retention, which can affect how the heart functions.  

A 2013 study published in The Lancet warned that high doses of NSAIDs may increase the risk of heart problems by about a third. In a review of over 600 clinical trials involving more than 353,000 patients, researchers found that NSAIDs doubled the risk for heart failure. People on high doses of the drugs also had up to four times greater risk for bleeding ulcers or gastrointestinal problems.

Another large study at the University of Florida in 2014 found that the over-the counter pain reliever naproxen raises the risk of a heart attack, stroke and death in postmenopausal women. Naproxen is a NSAID and the active ingredient in Aleve and other pain relievers commonly used to treat arthritis.

Studying data from over 160,000 postmenopausal women participating in a study funded by the National Institutes of Health, researchers estimated that using naproxen just twice a week raises the risk of cardiovascular problems by about 10 percent. The same study did not find a higher risk of a heart attack, stroke and death associated with ibuprofen, another type of NSAID.

Aleve & Other Pain Relievers Reduce Fertility in Women

By Pat Anson, Editor

Health experts have warned for years about the side effects of over-the-counter pain relievers – everything from liver failure to heart disease to hearing loss.

Now researchers are saying that Aleve and some other non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) reduce the fertility of women so significantly they could potentially be used as an emergency form of contraception.

The results of a small study presented at the European League Against Rheumatism Annual Congress show that three NSAIDs --  naproxen, diclofenac, and etoricoxib -- inhibited ovulation in women after just a few days of treatment.

Naproxen, diclofenac, and etoricoxib are the active ingredients in several brand name drugs sold around the world, including Aleve, Voltaren, and Arcoxia, respectively. Etoricoxib is not approved for use in the United States.

Thirty nine Iraqi women of childbearing age who suffered from back pain took part in the study; receiving diclofenac (100mg once daily), naproxen (500mg twice daily), etoricoxib (90mg once daily), or a placebo.

Treatment was given for 10 days from day 10 of the onset of their menstrual cycle, with their progesterone levels and follicle diameter analyzed via blood sample and sonography.

“After just ten days of treatment we saw a significant decrease in progesterone, a hormone essential for ovulation, across all treatment groups, as well as functional cysts in one third of patients,” said study investigator Professor Sami Salman, Department of Rheumatology, University of Baghdad.

“These findings show that even short-term use of these popular, over-the-counter drugs could have a significant impact on a woman's ability to have children. This needs to be better communicated to patients with rheumatic diseases, who may take these drugs on a regular basis with little awareness of the impact.”

Of the women receiving NSAIDs, only 6.3% taking diclofenac, 25% taking naproxen, and 27.3% taking etoricoxib ovulated, compared with 100% of the control group that was not taking a pain reliever.

The dominant follicle remained unruptured in 75% of the women taking diclofenac, 25% taking naproxen and 33% of the patients receiving etoricoxib. Rupturing of the dominant follicle and the subsequent release of an oocyte (unfertilized egg), is essential for ovulation to occur.

“These findings highlight the harmful effects NSAIDs may have on fertility, and could open the door for research into a new emergency contraception with a more favorable safety profile than those currently in use,” said Salman.

NSAIDs are among the most common pain relief medicines in the world. Every day more than 30 million Americans use them to relieve pain, lower fever and reduce inflammation.