• Etiologie

  • Facteurs exogènes : Autres

  • Voies biliaires

Incretins and cancer of the bile duct in type 2 diabetes

Menée au Royaume-Uni à partir de données portant sur 154 162 patients atteints d'un diabète de type 2, cette étude de cohorte évalue l'association entre une utilisation de médicaments à base d'incrétine (inhibiteurs de DPP-4, agonistes des récepteurs GLP-1) et le risque de cholangiocarcinome (période de suivi : 614 274 personnes-années ; 105 cas)

Existing trial data could help characterise this new association Is this issue of The BMJ, Abrahami and colleagues (doi:10.1136/bmj.k4880) report that use of dipeptidyl peptidase-4 inhibitors and glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1) receptor agonists (collectively called incretins) “might be associated with an increased risk of cholangiocarcinoma in adults with type 2 diabetes.”1 If incretins are associated only indirectly with cholangiocarcinoma, people with diabetes would not have a problem. The issue for patients, doctors, and regulators is establishing for certain whether these drugs cause cholangiocarcinoma, a conclusion that this single observational study cannot support. Abrahami and colleagues’ well executed pharmacoepidemiological study shows that people who take incretins have higher rates of cholangiocarcinoma than people who do not take incretins. One possibility is that non-incretin treatments prevent cholangiocarcinoma—an interpretation the authors discount. Another possibility is that incretins cause cholangiocarcinoma. Concluding this from an observational study (even a good one) might be like concluding that hospitals cause people to die—while knowing … (...)

BMJ

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