|
Contact: adees@acc.org;
800-253-4636; 301-581-3406
September 20, 2005
JACC
Focuses on Aspirin
Cutting-edge
research on an old stand-by
(BETHESDA, MD)No other medicine is as common, inexpensive,
and yet powerful in so many ways as aspirin; yet despite a century
of experience with the drug, researchers are still learning
important new lessons, while raising new questions, according
to seven special articles in the Sept. 20, 2005, issue of the
Journal of the American College of Cardiology.
As Franz H. Messerli, M.D., F.A.C.C., from St. Luke’s-Roosevelt
Hospital Center in New York, noted in an editorial, “Today,
about 50,000 tons of acetylsalicylic acid are produced every
year across the globe. If this entire output were pressed
into 500 mg tablets, it would amount to 100 billion tablets
every year.”
Dr. Messerli also remarked, “[W]ere aspirin
discovered today, it would probably not pass muster at the
Food and Drug Administration for any indication without a
black box warning.”
Aspirin May Be Safer than Thought for
Heart Failure Patients with Coronary Artery Disease
Although aspirin is strongly recommended for
most people at high risk for heart attacks, there have been
concerns it may be harmful for heart failure patients, because
aspirin might interfere with ACE inhibitor treatment or it
might worsen hypertension or kidney problems. However, the
largest study of the issue, a new analysis of Medicare records
on 24,012 patients who had been hospitalized for heart failure
with coronary artery disease, indicates that those prescribed
aspirin (54 percent of the total) fared as well or better
than those not prescribed aspirin.
“This study suggests that aspirin use
in patients with coronary artery disease and coexisting heart
failure is not harmful and may result in lower mortality rates.
Furthermore, there was no evidence that aspirin use attenuated
the beneficial effects of ACE inhibitors,” said Frederick
A. Masoudi, M.D., M.S.P.H., F.A.C.C., from the Denver Health
Medical Center and the University of Colorado Health Sciences
Center in Denver, Colo. and the Colorado Foundation for Medical
Care in Aurora, Colo.
However, Dr. Masoudi noted that while the study
accounted for differences between the patients taking aspirin
and those who were not, there may have been other important
differences they couldn't identify. Still, Dr. Masoudi said
it appears aspirin is under-used.
"Improving the use of aspirin in patients
with coronary artery disease is potentially a low-cost means
of improving outcomes," Dr. Masoudi said.
James E. Udelson, M.D., F.A.C.C., from Tufts-New
England Medical Center, who was not connected with this study,
noted that along with the longstanding concerns about aspirin’s
potential to harm heart failure patients, there is also the
possibility that withholding aspirin could deprive certain
patients of aspirin’s cardiovascular benefits.
“This paper by Masoudi and colleagues
adds support to the concept that aspirin has a very beneficial
effect in patients with both heart failure and also coronary
artery disease, in a study of a very large number of patients.
While the retrospective nature of the investigation adds some
limitations to the strengths of the conclusions, the data
suggest that physicians should not withhold aspirin from such
patients,” Dr. Udelson said.
However, Barry M. Massie, M.D., F.A.C.C., from
the University of California, San Francisco and the San Francisco
VAMC, struck a more cautious tone in an accompanying viewpoint
article, noting that the only two prospective randomized trials
of this topic suggest that aspirin may be associated with
worsening heart failure in some patients. The studies reported
30 percent higher rates of hospitalization among patients
on aspirin compared to those receiving warfarin or no therapy.
This difference might be explained by the inhibition of prostaglandins,
which play a role in counterbalancing the adverse effects
of neurohormonal activation on blood flow and, possibly, kidney
function in heart failure patients.
"These observations suggest that the use
of aspirin in heart failure patients should be limited to
those with definite indication such as documented coronary
disease, and that the dose should be no more than 162 milligrams
daily. This is the current recommendation of the Seventh American
College of Chest Physicians Conference on Antithrombotic and
Thrombolytic Therapy. Furthermore, I personally would consider
alternative anti-thrombotic agents in a small group of coronary
patients with advanced symptoms or repeated hospitalizations
for heart failure" Dr. Massie said.
Barry Greenberg, M.D., F.A.C.C., from the University
of California, San Diego, who was not connected with the research,
said the use of aspirin in patients with heart failure remains
controversial.
“Unfortunately, none of the available
studies provides a definitive answer to this question. In
this context, the two articles add to the debate,” Dr.
Greenberg said.
Prior Aspirin Use May Not Be a Red
Flag for Heart Attack Patients
Although aspirin can lower the risk of a heart
attack, a number of studies have indicated that when someone
has a heart attack despite taking aspirin, the outlook may
be worse than for a similar patient who had not been taking
aspirin before the heart attack. But researchers who analyzed
Medicare records on more than 100,000 heart attack patients
report that they did not see any link between prior aspirin
use and death rates within six months.
“Our findings contrast with some, but
not all, previous studies. No prior study, however, had the
opportunity to examine the real world experience of a nationally
representative group of patients, rather than a selected group
who were in a clinical trial or a small observational study,”
said Harlan M. Krumholz, M.D., S.M., F.A.C.C., from the Yale
University School of Medicine in New Haven, Conn. “For
the public, this study may reinforce the value of aspirin
for the prevention of heart disease: patients who were on
aspirin when they had their heart attack had a lower risk
of death from their heart attack.”
John Alexander, M.D., at the Duke University
Medical Center in Durham, N. C., who was not connected with
this study, agreed that the apparently divergent results between
this analysis and earlier studies might be related to differences
in the type of patients involved in research trials and those
treated in routine clinical practice.
“The fact that prior aspirin use was
not predictive of subsequent events in their analysis, whereas
it has been in many others, does call into question whether
prior aspirin use really is a marker of risk; but I don’t
think it settles the question,” Dr. Alexander said.
Simon R. Kennon, M.D., at The Heart Hospital,
London in London, United Kingdom, who also was not connected
with the research team, agreed that the study results challenge
the idea that prior aspirin use indicates that a heart attack
is at higher risk.
“This should lay to rest the suggestion
that prior aspirin use predicts poor outcome in such patients
and raises questions about its use in risk scoring models,”
Dr. Kennon said.
Aspirin at Night May Lower Blood Pressure
Aspirin’s effect on blood pressure may
depend on when patients take their pills. Researchers in Spain
randomized 328 patients with mild hypertension to take a low-dose
(100 milligram) aspirin pill each morning, take the pill before
bed, or not take aspirin at all. After three months, blood
pressure rose slightly among the patients taking aspirin in
the morning, but it fell in the group taking aspirin at night.
The group that did not take aspirin saw a slight decline in
blood pressure, but the difference was not statistically significant.
“The major result from this study is
that aspirin selectively decreases blood pressure as a function
of the timing of its administration in relation to the rest-activity
cycle of each individual subject,” wrote the study authors,
including Ramón C. Hermida, Ph.D., from the University
of Vigo in Vigo, Spain.
The researchers called for further studies
to see if there are other benefits from taking low-dose aspirin
before bed, instead of in the morning.
Joseph V. Messer, M.D., M.A.C.C., from Rush
University Medical Center in Chicago, Ill., who was not connected
with this study, said the results again demonstrate the extraordinary
value of aspirin, one of the least costly medications.
“Given the widespread use of aspirin,
the prevalence of hypertension, and the ease in altering the
time of aspirin administration, these results should be widely
disseminated,” Dr. Messer said.
Franz H. Messerli, M.D., F.A.C.C., from St.
Luke’s-Roosevelt Hospital Center in New York, commented
on the possible antihypertensive properties of aspirin in
an editorial in the journal.
“I am a bit doubtful that this is as
simple as the authors describe it; but if indeed aspirin taken
at bedtime did lower blood pressure, the implications would
be tremendous,” Dr. Messerli said. “But clearly
it will have to be confirmed and re-confirmed before it has
any major clinical significance.”
While Dr. Messerli said it is too early to
recommend low-dose aspirin as a blood pressure treatment,
he doesn’t see any harm in people who are already taking
aspirin switching from taking it in the morning to taking
the pill at night. However, he pointed out that people have
a harder time remembering to take medications at night, so
they may be more likely to miss doses.
The American College of Cardiology, a 33,000-member
nonprofit professional medical society and teaching institution,
is dedicated to fostering optimal cardiovascular care and
disease prevention through professional education, promotion
of research, leadership in the development of standards and
guidelines, and the formulation of health care policy.
The American
College of Cardiology (ACC) provides these new reports of
clinical studies published in the Journal of the American
College of Cardiology as a service to physicians, the media,
the public, and other interested parties. However, statements
or opinions expressed in these reports reflect the view of
the author(s) and do not represent official policy of the
ACC unless stated so. |