Carpal Tunnel Syndrome Attributed to Medication Use: A Pharmacovigilance Study.
Mihalache. Andrew A; Volfson. Emily E; Huang. Ryan R; Zuo. Kevin K; Persitz. Jonathan J
Key Findings
- Out of 12.9 million adverse event reports, 6,837 (0.05%) involved CTS.
- Tesamorelin had a reporting odds ratio (ROR) of 20.7 (95% CI 13.7‑31.3), indicating a strong signal of over‑reporting for CTS.
- Female patients made up 69.5% of CTS cases and the average age was 57 years, suggesting higher susceptibility in older women.
Practical Outcomes
- If you’re using tesamorelin, regularly check for early CTS symptoms (hand/ wrist tingling, weakness). Consider lowering the dose or pausing use if symptoms appear, especially if you’re older or female. Keeping a symptom log can help you catch problems early and discuss them with a clinician.
Summary
A big database of drug side‑effects shows that people taking tesamorelin report carpal tunnel syndrome (CTS) far more often than expected – about 20 times higher than the average drug. For DIY health enthusiasts using tesamorelin to boost growth‑hormone effects, this means you should watch out for hand numbness, tingling, or wrist pain.
Abstract
Carpal tunnel syndrome (CTS) is a prevalent compression neuropathy with multiple well-documented mechanical and systemic risk factors. However, the role of pharmacological agents in the development of CTS remains underexplored. This study aims to identify drugs disproportionately associated with CTS reports using data from the Food and Drug Administration Adverse Event Reporting System (FAERS). A retrospective pharmacovigilance analysis was conducted using OpenVigil 2.1 to evaluate adverse event (AE) reports of CTS from the FAERS database from October 2003 to September 2024. Only drugs identified as the primary suspect in at least 10 AE reports were included. Disproportionality analysis, including reporting odds ratios (RORs), was used to assess associations between CTS and specific drugs. Positive signals were validated using Bayesian confidence propagation neural network algorithms, with drugs having ROR ≥10 and significant Bayesian confidence intervals (IC025 > 0) considered strongly associated with CTS. Of 12,929,504 AEs reported during the study period, 6,837 (0.05%) involved CTS. Female patients comprised 69.5% of CTS cases, with a mean age of 57.0±14.9 years. Ten drugs were found to have significant overreporting of CTS, including idursulfase (ROR=51.2, 95% CI=39.0-67.2), galsulfase (ROR=26.8, 95% CI=17.2-41.7), laronidase (ROR=20.9, 95% CI=14.4-30.3), tesamorelin (ROR=20.7, 95% CI=13.7-31.3), anastrozole (ROR=20.6, 95% CI=17.0-24.9), alendronic acid (ROR=17.1, 95% CI=14.5-20.1), gamma-hydroxybutyric acid (GHB) (ROR=16.3, 95% CI=9.6-27.6), rofecoxib (ROR=16.1, 95% CI=14.3-18.2), alendronate (ROR=12.9, 95% CI=11.0-15.2), and tafamidis (ROR=12.0, 95% CI=9.2-15.7). Several drugs were disproportionately associated with CTS in the FAERS database, including enzyme replacement therapies (ERTs), aromatase inhibitors, bisphosphonates, growth hormone (GH)-releasing factor analogs, GHB, rofecoxib, and tafamidis. These findings highlight the critical need for increased vigilance and monitoring of new-onset or worsening CTS in high-risk populations prescribed the aforementioned medications. Clinicians should carefully scrutinize pharmacological history when evaluating patients in this context.
Study Information
pubmed
2025
2025-05-12T00:00:00.000Z
10.7759/cureus.83972
1
33