A study investigated whether statin use, which inhibits cholesterol biosynthesis, is associated with a lower risk of developing active tuberculosis (TB). This was a population-based cohort study using Taiwan's National Health Insurance Research Database (NHIRD). The cohort included all adults aged 18 years or older who were followed longitudinally from January 1999 through December 2011. Drug exposure was assessed during 1999, and participants were followed from January 1, 2000 until the first occurrence of active TB diagnosis, termination of insurance coverage, death, or the end of the study.
The study included all eligible adults in the NHIRD, with 8,098 patients who developed active TB and 809,800 controls. The mean follow-up period was 9.8 years. Statin users were defined as individuals with at least 7 days of statin prescriptions. Statins included simvastatin, lovastatin, pravastatin, fluvastatin, atorvastatin, cerivastatin, rosuvastatin, and pitavastatin. Exposure was categorized as current use (prescription within 30 days before the index date), recent use (31 to 90 days), past use (91 days to 1 year), and chronic use (more than 90 cumulative prescription days within the year of TB diagnosis). The analysis adjusted for multiple confounders, including disease risk score (DRS) adjustment, and also evaluated subgroup effects and duration-response relationships.
All categories of statin use, including current, recent, past, and chronic use, were associated with a reduced risk of active TB compared with non-users. Chronic statin use showed the strongest association, with an unadjusted relative risk (RR) of 0.74 (95% CI, 0.63 to 0.87), an adjusted RR of 0.66 (95% CI, 0.56 to 0.78), and a DRS-adjusted RR of 0.62 (95% CI, 0.53 to 0.72). Current statin use demonstrated a similar protective association. Subgroup analyses consistently showed reduced TB risk across all predefined groups, although none of the interaction tests reached statistical significance. A duration-response analysis found progressively lower TB incidence with longer statin use. When cumulative statin exposure was analyzed as a continuous variable, each additional day of statin therapy was associated with a 0.002% reduction in the risk of active TB (p < 0.010). Baseline comparisons showed that patients with TB generally had greater comorbidity, more TB risk factors, more outpatient visits, and higher cardiovascular medication use than controls.
In this large nationwide cohort from Taiwan, statin use, particularly chronic use, was associated with a significantly lower risk of developing active TB, with evidence of a duration-response relationship. As an observational cohort study, the findings support an association rather than causation. The excerpt does not specify the study's funding source, conflicts of interest, inclusion and exclusion criteria beyond age eligibility, or detailed limitations, so these cannot be assessed from the available text. The level of evidence is moderate for an observational population-based cohort study.
Source: Lai CC, Lee MT, Lee SH, Hsu WT, Chang SS, Chen SC, Lee CC. Statin treatment is associated with a decreased risk of active tuberculosis: an analysis of a nationally representative cohort. Thorax. 2016 Jul 1;71(7):646-51.