Literature DB >> 12409970

Benefit and harm of low-dose aspirin in well-treated hypertensives at different baseline cardiovascular risk.

Alberto Zanchetti1, Lennart Hansson, Björn Dahlöf, Stevo Julius, Joël Ménard, Ingrid Warnold, Hans Wedel.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The effects of aspirin in subjects without cardiovascular disease are controversial. In the intensively treated patients of the Hypertension Optimal Treatment (HOT) Study, randomization to low-dose aspirin (75 mg daily) versus placebo significantly reduced cardiovascular events (-15%) and myocardial infarction (-36%), but increased major bleedings (+65%). The present analyses of HOT Study data aim at identifying subgroups of hypertensives with different benefit-to-harm ratios from aspirin, in order to provide recommendations about the use of aspirin in hypertension.
METHODS: The 18 790 hypertensive patients (aspirin 9399, placebo 9391; average treatment duration 3.8 years) were stratified for global cardiovascular risk and for individual risk factors. Subgroup-treatment interaction analyses (end points: cardiovascular events, myocardial infarction, major bleedings) were performed by a Cox proportional hazard model. Relative and absolute benefits and harms were calculated.
RESULTS: Interaction analyses indicated that of all subgroups, only patients with serum creatinine > 1.3 mg/dl had a significantly greater reduction of cardiovascular events and myocardial infarction (-13 and -7/1000 patient-years), while risk of bleeding was not significantly different between subgroups. In addition to patients with higher creatinine, a favourable balance between benefit and harm of aspirin was found in subgroups of patients at higher global baseline risk and baseline systolic pressure > or = 180 or diastolic pressure > or = 107 mmHg.
CONCLUSIONS: Low-dose aspirin should be recommended to well-treated hypertensive patients with even moderate increase in serum creatinine. Aspirin may also be recommended in well-treated hypertensives at higher global cardiovascular risk or higher initial blood pressures.

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Year:  2002        PMID: 12409970     DOI: 10.1097/00004872-200211000-00031

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Hypertens        ISSN: 0263-6352            Impact factor:   4.844


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