SCIENCE More Than
One Painkiller Risky

People who use two
or more
non-steroidal
anti-inflammatory
drugs (NSAIDs) to
help control pain
have a worse
health-related
quality of life than
their peers who use
only one, results of
a study suggest.
“Patients may
self-manage their
pain to improve
their daily
activities by taking
more than one NSAID.
However, by
attempting to obtain
symptom relief,
patients may be
putting themselves
at risk for
complications,“ Dr.
Stacey H. Kovac,
from the Durham VA
Medical Center in
North Carolina, and
colleagues note in
the medical journal
Arthritis Care and
Research, according
to Reuters.
Prior research has
established a strong
link between
multiple NSAID use
and gastrointestinal
problems, but it was
unclear if this
practice affected
health-related
quality-of-life.
To investigate,
Kovac’s team
interviewed 138
patients from a
large regional
managed care
organization who had
filled one or more
NSAID prescription
between February and
August 2002.
Overall, 26 percent
of subjects used two
or more NSAIDs, the
report indicates.
These patients
scored lower on the
physical component
of a quality of life
questionnaire than
did single-NSAID
users, suggesting a
poorer
health-related
quality of life.
Whether multiple
NSAID use impairs
health-related
quality of life
itself or whether it
simply reflects a
more severe
underlying disease
that is responsible
will require further
study, the
investigators
note.