Crestorrosuvastatin

According to the FDA label: Pediatric use information for patients 7 to 17 years of age is approved for AstraZeneca’s CRESTOR (rosuvastatin calcium) tablets. However, due to AstraZeneca’s marketing exclusivity rights, this drug product is not labeled with that pediatric information.

198,881 adverse event reports submitted to the FDA (2004–2026)

This data reflects voluntary reports submitted to the FDA's Adverse Event Monitoring System (AEMS), formerly the FDA Adverse Event Reporting System (FAERS). A report does not mean the medication caused the event. Data may be incomplete or contain errors. Learn more about AEMS. New to this data? Read our guide on how to interpret FDA adverse event reports →
New to FDA adverse event data? Here's how to read these reports →

Top Reported Adverse Events

The most frequently reported events in association with Crestor in the FAERS database. These are events reported by patients taking this medication, not necessarily caused by it. A single report may include multiple events.

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Ranked by frequency of reports, not severity. The most-reported event is not necessarily the most dangerous or the most common in patients taking this drug.

Who Is Reporting

Demographics of patients in FAERS reports that included this information. Not all reports include patient demographics.

By Sex

View reporter sex data as a table
Crestor adverse event reports by reporter sex
SexReports
Female97,274
Male86,962
Unknown754

By Age Group

View age group data as a table
Crestor adverse event reports by reporter age group
Age groupReports
0-17627
18-341,323
35-4910,416
50-6444,162
65-7443,958
75+34,476

This shows who filed reports, reflecting who takes this drug and who tends to report, not who is at greatest risk.

Reported Outcomes

Outcomes recorded in FAERS reports that included Crestor. A single report may involve multiple reactions, each with a different outcome. These categories are defined by FDA reporting guidelines, not by PillSignal.

View outcome data as a table
Crestor adverse event reports by reported outcome
OutcomeReports
Other Serious90,586
Non-Serious64,062
Hospitalization61,925
Death11,960
Life-Threatening8,455
Disability6,102

Serious outcomes are far more likely to be reported than mild ones, so this overstates how often outcomes are serious. A recorded death does not mean the drug caused it.

Number of FAERS reports received per quarter for Crestor. Changes in volume may reflect shifts in prescribing rates, media attention, or reporting behavior, not changes in the medication's safety profile.

View report trend as a table
Crestor adverse event reports by year
YearReports
20042,922
20052,047
20063,054
20072,420
20083,896
20095,901
20107,391
20119,526
201211,039
20137,390
20148,105
201510,275
201610,287
20179,901
201811,118
201911,853
202011,537
202111,926
202212,108
202312,822
202413,894
202515,714
2026 (partial)3,755

The steep increase around 2004 reflects the FDA's move to electronic submission, not a change in this drug's safety. Trends track reporting volume, not risk.

Medications commonly reported with Crestor

In FDA adverse event reports that mention Crestor, these medications appeared most often in the same report.

This reflects co-occurrence in submitted reports, not evidence of drug interaction or combined risk. People often report several medications taken for the same condition or for unrelated reasons. Talk to a doctor or pharmacist about your specific medications.

Other medications with similar adverse event profiles in FDA FAERS reports.

Data Source

This data is sourced from the FDA's Adverse Event Monitoring System (AEMS), formerly FAERS, via the OpenFDA API. PillSignal is not affiliated with the FDA.

View this data on the FDA website →

Data last updated: June 2026