| Literature DB >> 24339983 |
Paul Sutcliffe1, Martin Connock, Tara Gurung, Karoline Freeman, Samantha Johnson, Kandala Ngianga-Bakwin, Amy Grove, Binu Gurung, Sarah Morrow, Saverio Stranges, Aileen Clarke.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Aspirin has been recommended for primary prevention of cardiovascular disease (CVD) and cancer, but overall benefits are unclear. We aimed to use novel methods to re-evaluate the balance of benefits and harms of aspirin using evidence from randomised controlled trials, systematic reviews and meta-analyses. METHODS ANDEntities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24339983 PMCID: PMC3855368 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0081970
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Figure 1PRISMA flow diagram.
Key: CVD=Cardiovascular diseases; RCT=Randomised controlled trial; SR=Systematic Review.
*Of the 27 included publications: a) CVD, SR=9, RCT=3; b) Cancer, SR=6; and c) Diabetes, SR=7, RCT=2. **One paper was identified from assessment of reference lists of excluded papers, this had been excluded at abstract sift but was not considered relevant until reading the paper in full.
Aspirin dose and participant characteristics in the 9 RCTs of primary prevention.
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| BDT 1988 [ | 300 or 500 | No placebo | 100 | Open label | 31 | None | n = 5,139 |
| PHS 1989 [ | 325 eod | Placebo | 100 | Double blind | 11 | Beta-carotene | n = 22,071 |
| HOT 1998 [ | 75 | Placebo | 53 | Double blind | 16 | Various** | n = 18,790 |
| TPT 1998 [ | 75 | Placebo | 100 | Double blind | 41 | Warfarin | n = 5,058 |
| PPP 2001 [ | 100 | No Placebo | 42 | Open label | 15 | Vitamin E | n = 4,495 |
| WHS 2005 [ | 100 eod | Placebo | 0 | Double blind | 10.1 | Vitamin E | n = 39,876 |
| Beta-carotene | |||||||
| POPADAD 2008 [ | 100 | Placebo | 44 | Double blind | 32 | Antioxidant | n = 1,276 |
| JPAD 2008 [ | 81 or 100 | No placebo | 55 | Open label | 4.4 | None | n = 2,539 |
| AAA 2010 [ | 100 | Placebo | 28 | Double blind | 33 | None | n = 3,350 |
BDT=British Doctors Trial (BMJ 296,313); PHS=Physician’s Health Study (NEJM 321, 129); HOT=Hypertension Optimal Treatment (Lancet 351, 1755); TPT=Thrombosis Prevention Trial (Lancet 351, 233); PPP=Primary Prevention Project (Lancet 357, 89); WHS=Women’s Health Study (NEJM 352, 1293); POPADAD=Prevention Of Progression of Arterial Disease And Diabetes (BMJ 337, a1840); JPAD=Japanese Primary Prevention of Atherosclerosis with Aspirin for Diabetes (JAMA 300, 2134); AAA=Aspirin for Asymptomatic Atherosclerosis (JAMA 303, 841)
* aspirin taken each day unless specified; eod = every other day; ** therapies to achieve a target blood pressure
Results from CVD and cancer systematic reviews: all comparisons aspirin vs. control.
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| All-cause mortality | Raju [ | RR 0.94 (0.88–1.00) | 314** | 2,752* | 36* | |
| 2,172** | 46** | |||||
| All-cause mortality | Berger [ | RR 0.94 (0.89–1.00) | 318** | 2,996* | 33* | |
| 2,198** | 46 ** | |||||
| All-cause mortality | Rothwell [ | OR 0.92 (0.85–1.00) | 85* | |||
| 75** | ||||||
| All-cause mortality | Rothwell [ | HR 0.96 (0.90–1.02) | ||||
| Cancer mortality ~ 7 year follow up | Seshasai [ | OR 0.93 (0.84–1.03) | 677** | 5,974* | 17* | |
| 4,779** | 21** | |||||
| Cancer mortality | Rothwell [ | OR 0.79 (0.68–0.92) | 85* | |||
| 54** | ||||||
| Cancer mortality | Rothwell [ | HR 0.80 (0.72–0.88) | ||||
| Cancer mortality | Rothwell [ | OR 0.84 (0.75–0.94) | 319** | 25* (36 assumes mean follow up 7 years) | ||
| 31** (44 assumes mean follow up 7 years) | ||||||
| Colo-rectal cancer death ~ 20 year follow up | Rothwell [ | OR 0.66 (0.51–0.85) | 0.034*** | 34*36 | ||
| 0.036 | ||||||
| MI / stroke / CV death | ATT [ | RaR 0.88 (0.82–0.94) | -0.06 | 1,667 | 60 | |
| MI / stroke / CV death | Berger [ | RR 0.90 (0.85–0.96) | 171** | 1,676* | 60* | |
| 1,184** | 84** | |||||
| Total CHD | Seshasai [ | OR 0.86 | 226** | 2,146* | 47* | |
| (0.74–1.01) | 1,564** | 64** | ||||
| Total CHD | Bartolucci [ | OR 0.85 (0.69–1.06) | NC | NC | NC | |
| Non-trivial bleed | Seshasai [ | OR 1.31 (1.14–1.50) | 146** | 562 | 178* | |
| 1010** | 99** | |||||
| Major bleed | Berger [ | RR 1.62 | 293** | 2,082 | 48* | |
| (1.31–2.00) | 2,208 | 49** | ||||
| Major bleed | Raju [ | RR 1.66 | 312** | 2078* | 48* | |
| (1.41–1.95) | 2186** | 46** | ||||
| Major bleed | ATT [ | RaR 1.54 (1.30–1.82) | 0.030 | 3333 | 30 | |
| GI bleed | Raju [ | RR 1.37 (1.15–1.62) | 211* | 853** | 117** | |
| 1476* | 68* | |||||
| Haemorrhagic stroke | Raju [ | RR 1.36 (1.01–1.82) | 534* | 10,516* | 10* | |
| 4,080** | 25** | |||||
| Haemorrhagic stroke | Berger [ | RR 1.35 (1.01–1.82) | 1421* | 11,165** | 9** | |
| 10,798* | 9* | |||||
| Haemorrhagic stroke | ATT [ | RaR 1.32 (1.00–1.74) | 0.01 | 10 | ||
| 0.00818 | 8 |
CHD = coronary heart disease; MI = myocardial infarction; GI = gastrointestinal; RaR = rate ratio; RR = risk ratio; OR = odds ratio; HR = hazard ratio; NC = not calculated because individual patient and event numbers not reported.
* aggregate method; ** alternative method; *** aggregate data from Figure 1 of Rothwell 2010 [13] (119 colorectal deaths / 8282 aspirin users and 121colorectal deaths / 5751 aspirin “non-users”, over 20 years of follow up (including approximately 5 years of scheduled aspirin use); # based on rounded data; ## based on unrounded aggregate data; ^ assumes mean follow up of 10 years; ^^ follow up 20 years; Cancer mortality refers to death from any cancer.
Figure 2Cumulative random effects meta-analysis of odds ratio for total CHD.
Studies arranged according to recruitment year (data from Seshasai et al., 2012) [38].
Figure 3Gompertz fit to the ONS data.
Symbols represent the UK ONS survival for 50 year old individuals; the solid line is a Gompertz fit to the ONS data; the dashed line represents the survival of aspirin users based on a ten year OR for all-cause mortality of 0.94 (Seshasai [38] & Berger [19]) and modelled keeping the scale parameter for the Gompertz fit constant. The difference in area under the solid and dashed curves represents the mean gain in life over a life time horizon.