The same cholesterol-lowering statins taken by tens of millions worldwide to prevent cardiovascular disease may help fend off infections as well, new studies have found.

The studies were presented Monday at the 50th annual ICAAC (Interscience Conference on Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy), the biggest global get-together on infectious disease. It is being held in Boston September 12-14.
A review of a Danish study of about 70,000 patients with pneumonia that included 7,000 who were on statins, found there was 31-percent lower mortality in the subset on statins compared to the others, said Dr. Reimar Thomsen, of Aarthus University Hospital in Denmark.
But the study did not look at a multifactorial bigger picture. For example the people on statins tended to be younger and fitter and better off than the others, Thomsen explained.
So "I believe we need to interpret these findings with great caution," he told reporters. "Therefore, randomized statin therapy trials among persons with pneumonia are badly needed to confirm or contradict the observational findings."
Dr. Nasia Safdar of the University of Wisconsin said she saw in her research there was "lower mortality" in organ transplant patients with subsequent blood infections, and who took statins.
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"The data are intriguing. It should definitely be studied further. But at this point statins cannot be recommended as standard of care ....for infection," she stressed.
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"But some facts limit the strength of evidence including the fact that they are very heterogenic in nature and that it's not same statins or dosages and the subject varied from healthy people to chronically ill," he cautioned.
"Statins cannot and should not be recommended for the use at the present time for prevention and treatment of infections," he stressed.
Source-AFP