Routine Aspirin More Harmful Than Beneficial in Healthy People
|
By HospiMedica International staff writers Posted on 02 Feb 2012 |
A new study claims that a regular dose of aspirin is more likely to do harm than benefit healthy people with no history of cardiovascular disease (CVD), due to the increased risk of internal bleeding.
Researchers at St George's University of London (SGUL; United Kingdom), Addenbrooke's Hospital (Cambridge, UK), and other institutions analyzed data from nine clinical trials covering over 100,000 healthy people. Only placebo-controlled trials with at least 1,000 participants each were included, reporting on CVD, nonvascular outcomes, or death. Three authors abstracted the data, and study-specific odds ratios (ORs) were combined using random-effects meta-analysis. Risks versus benefits were evaluated by comparing CVD risk reductions with increases in bleeding.
The results showed that during a mean follow-up of six years, aspirin treatment reduced total CVD events by 10%, driven primarily by reduction in nonfatal myocardial infarct (MI). There was no significant reduction in CVD death or cancer mortality, but there was increased risk of nontrivial bleeding events; overall, the results showed that while one CVD was prevented for every 120 people, one in 73 developed significant internal bleeding over the same period. Significant heterogeneity was observed for coronary heart disease (CAD) and bleeding outcomes, which could not be accounted for by major demographic or participant characteristics. The study was published online on January 9, 2012, in the Archives of Internal Medicine.
“Despite important reductions in nonfatal MI, aspirin prophylaxis in people without prior CVD does not lead to reductions in either cardiovascular death or cancer mortality,” concluded senior author Professor Kausik Ray, MD, of SGUL, and colleagues. “Because the benefits are further offset by clinically important bleeding events, routine use of aspirin for primary prevention is not warranted and treatment decisions need to be considered on a case-by-case basis.”
Acetylsalicylic acid has an antiplatelet effect by inhibiting the production of thromboxane, which under normal circumstances binds platelet molecules together to create a patch over damaged walls of blood vessels. Because the platelet patch can become too large and also block blood flow both locally and downstream, aspirin is also used for primary prevention to help prevent heart attacks, strokes, and blood clot formation in people at high risk. It has also been established that low doses of aspirin may be given for secondary prevention immediately after a heart attack to reduce the risk of another MI or of the death of cardiac tissue.
Related Links:
St George's University of London
Addenbrooke's Hospital
Researchers at St George's University of London (SGUL; United Kingdom), Addenbrooke's Hospital (Cambridge, UK), and other institutions analyzed data from nine clinical trials covering over 100,000 healthy people. Only placebo-controlled trials with at least 1,000 participants each were included, reporting on CVD, nonvascular outcomes, or death. Three authors abstracted the data, and study-specific odds ratios (ORs) were combined using random-effects meta-analysis. Risks versus benefits were evaluated by comparing CVD risk reductions with increases in bleeding.
The results showed that during a mean follow-up of six years, aspirin treatment reduced total CVD events by 10%, driven primarily by reduction in nonfatal myocardial infarct (MI). There was no significant reduction in CVD death or cancer mortality, but there was increased risk of nontrivial bleeding events; overall, the results showed that while one CVD was prevented for every 120 people, one in 73 developed significant internal bleeding over the same period. Significant heterogeneity was observed for coronary heart disease (CAD) and bleeding outcomes, which could not be accounted for by major demographic or participant characteristics. The study was published online on January 9, 2012, in the Archives of Internal Medicine.
“Despite important reductions in nonfatal MI, aspirin prophylaxis in people without prior CVD does not lead to reductions in either cardiovascular death or cancer mortality,” concluded senior author Professor Kausik Ray, MD, of SGUL, and colleagues. “Because the benefits are further offset by clinically important bleeding events, routine use of aspirin for primary prevention is not warranted and treatment decisions need to be considered on a case-by-case basis.”
Acetylsalicylic acid has an antiplatelet effect by inhibiting the production of thromboxane, which under normal circumstances binds platelet molecules together to create a patch over damaged walls of blood vessels. Because the platelet patch can become too large and also block blood flow both locally and downstream, aspirin is also used for primary prevention to help prevent heart attacks, strokes, and blood clot formation in people at high risk. It has also been established that low doses of aspirin may be given for secondary prevention immediately after a heart attack to reduce the risk of another MI or of the death of cardiac tissue.
Related Links:
St George's University of London
Addenbrooke's Hospital
Latest Critical Care News
- Smartphone Heart Rhythm App Reduces Unnecessary Cardioversion Procedures
- Bedside CSF Monitor Detects Early Infection in Fluid Drains
- Wearable Ultrasound Patch Noninvasively Paces Heart to Stabilize Arrhythmias
- New Practice Guidance Supports Prostatic Artery Embolization for BPH Symptoms
- AI ECG Tool Detects Cardiac Amyloidosis for Early Screening
- Cuffless Wearable Enables Continuous Blood Pressure Monitoring for Hypertension Care
- AI-Guided System Supports Cardiac Ultrasound Training on Cart-Based Systems
- AI ECG Index Tracks Pubertal Maturation in Children and Adolescents
- Noninvasive AI Tool Enables Pressure-Guided Heart Failure Management
- Regenerative Therapies Aim to Support Recovery After Traumatic Brain Injury
- Ring-Type Cuffless Monitor Becomes First Added to Official Hypertension Guidelines
- “Intelligent Tattoo” Method Detects Early Melanoma Signals
- Implantable Wireless Light Device Advances Bladder Cancer Treatment
- Reusable Intermittent Catheters Reduce Antibiotic Use Without Increasing Urinary Tract Infections
- Smart Wristband Technology Detects Cardiac Arrest and Alerts Responders
- FDA-Cleared Home Sleep Test Enables Multi-Night Diagnosis of Sleep Apnea
Channels
Artificial Intelligence
view channel
AI Platform Supports Noninvasive Remote Hemodynamic Monitoring in Heart Failure
Heart failure remains a leading cause of hospitalization in adults over 65, affecting more than 6.7 million people in the U.S. Clinicians often lose visibility into hemodynamic deterioration once patients... Read more
AI Tool Predicts Unplanned Care and Symptom Burden in Cancer Survivors
Unplanned emergency visits and hospitalizations remain common in cancer survivorship, when routine clinical contact often tapers while new symptoms emerge. These events reflect unmet needs and disrupt... Read moreSurgical Techniques
view channel
CE-Marked Ultrasonic Shears Streamline Breast and Thyroid Surgery
Thyroid and breast surgeries are often performed in confined anatomical spaces near critical structures, making precise dissection and controlled thermal management essential. As the global disease burden... Read more
3D Map of Heart Electrical Wiring Aims to Guide Congenital Heart Repair
Tetralogy of Fallot is one of the most common congenital heart problems and often requires surgery in infancy. Many survivors later develop conduction abnormalities because the cardiac electrical system... Read morePatient Care
view channel
AI Avatar Doctor Improves Patient Understanding Before Radiotherapy
Radiation oncology consultations require patients to grasp complex concepts quickly, yet anxiety and information overload often undermine understanding and informed consent. Poor comprehension can also... Read more
Wearable Sleep Data Predict Adherence to Pulmonary Rehabilitation
Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) is a long-term lung disorder that makes breathing difficult and often disturbs sleep, reducing energy for daily activities. Limited engagement in pulmonary... Read moreHealth IT
view channel
AI-Native EHR Achieves EU Medical Device Certification
InterSystems (Boston, MA, USA) announced that its IntelliCare electronic health record (EHR) solutions have been certified as Class IIa medical devices under the European Union Medical Device Regulation... Read more
EHR-Integrated Screening Workflow Detects Cognitive Impairment at Admission
Cognitive impairment involves difficulties with thinking, learning, memory, and decision-making, and is more common in older adults. In U.S. hospitals, more than 40% of admitted older adults have dementia,... Read morePoint of Care
view channel
Portable MRI System Accelerates Emergency Brain Imaging and Triage
Emergency departments frequently face delays accessing conventional magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) for patients with suspected neurological emergencies. Such waits can slow triage, prolong boarding,... Read more







