Pharmaceuticals (Jun 2024)

Decreased Risk of Osteoporosis Incident in Subjects Receiving Chinese Herbal Medicine for <i>Sjögren syndrome</i> Treatment: A Retrospective Cohort Study with a Nested Case-Control Analysis

  • Chieh-Tsung Yen,
  • Hanoch Livneh,
  • Hua-Lung Huang,
  • Ming-Chi Lu,
  • Wei-Jen Chen,
  • Tzung-Yi Tsai

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ph17060745
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 17, no. 6
p. 745

Abstract

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Sjögren syndrome (SS) is a long-lasting inflammatory autoimmune disease that may cause diverse manifestations, particularly osteoporosis. Though usage of Chinese herbal medicine (CHM) can safely manage autoimmune disease and treatment-related symptoms, the relation between CHM use and osteoporosis risk in SS persons is not yet recognized. With that in mind, this population-level nested case-control study aimed to compare the risk of osteoporosis with and without CHM use. Potential subjects aged 20–70 years, diagnosed with SS between 2001 and 2010, were retrieved from a national health claims database. Those diagnosed with osteoporosis after SS were identified and randomly matched to those without osteoporosis. We capitalize on the conditional logistic regression to estimate osteoporosis risk following CHM use. A total of 1240 osteoporosis cases were detected and randomly matched to 1240 controls at a ratio of 1:1. Those receiving conventional care plus CHM had a substantially lower chance of osteoporosis than those without CHM. Prolonged use of CHM, especially for one year or more, markedly dwindled sequent osteoporosis risk by 71%. Integrating CHM into standard care may favor the improvement of bone function, but further well-designed randomized controlled trials to investigate the possible mechanism are needed.

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