| Literature DB >> 26423305 |
Milo A Puhan1,2, Tsung Yu3,4, Inge Stegeman5,6, Ravi Varadhan7,8, Sonal Singh9, Cynthia M Boyd10.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Clinical practice guidelines provide separate recommendations for different diseases that may be prevented or treated by the same intervention. Also, they commonly provide recommendations for entire populations but not for individuals. To address these two limitations, our aim was to conduct benefit-harm analyses for a wide range of individuals using the example of low dose aspirin for primary prevention of cardiovascular disease and cancer and to develop Benefit-Harm Charts that show the overall benefit-harm balance for individuals.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26423305 PMCID: PMC4589917 DOI: 10.1186/s12916-015-0493-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med ISSN: 1741-7015 Impact factor: 8.775
Selected recommendations on low dose aspirin for primary prevention of CVD and colorectal cancer
| Disease outcome | Organization | Recommendation and assumptions made |
|---|---|---|
| Cardiovascular disease | European Society of Cardiology [ | Aspirin or clopidogrel cannot be recommended in individuals without cardiovascular or cerebrovascular disease due to the increased risk of major bleeding. (Class of recommendation III = is not recommended; level of evidence weak) |
| No details on assumptions or on how benefit-harm assessment was done | ||
| Cardiovascular disease | World Health Organization [ | − Coronary heart disease 10-year risk <10 %. For individuals in this risk category, the harm caused by aspirin treatment outweighs the benefits. Aspirin should not be given to individuals in this low-risk category. (1++, A) |
| − Coronary heart disease 10-year risk 10 to <20 %. For individuals in this risk category, the benefits of aspirin treatment are balanced by the harm caused. Aspirin should not be given to individuals in this risk category. (1++, A) | ||
| − Coronary heart disease 10-year risk 20 to <30 %. For individuals in this risk category, the balance of benefits and harm from aspirin treatment is not clear. Aspirin should probably not be given to individuals in this risk category. (1++, A) | ||
| − Coronary heart disease 10-year risk ≥30 %. Individuals in this risk category should be given low dose aspirin. (1++, A) | ||
| No details on assumptions or on how benefit-harm assessment was done. | ||
| Cardiovascular disease | US Preventive Services Task Force [ | Encourage men age 45 to 79 years to use aspirin when the potential benefit of a reduction in MI outweighs the potential harm of an increase in gastrointestinal hemorrhage. (“A” recommendation) |
| The reduction in MI outweighs the potential harm of an increase in gastrointestinal hemorrhage: | ||
| − 45–59 year old if ≥4 % 10-year risk of coronary heart disease | ||
| − 60–69 year old if ≥9 % 10-year risk of coronary heart disease | ||
| − 70–79 year old if ≥12 % 10-year risk of coronary heart disease | ||
| Assumptions for benefit-harm assessment: | ||
| − Equal weights given to coronary heart disease, gastrointestinal hemorrhage, and hemorrhagic stroke | ||
| − 10-year risk for coronary heart disease considered from 0–20 % | ||
| − Average risk per age category considered gastrointestinal hemorrhage and hemorrhagic stroke | ||
| − Ischemic stroke not considered | ||
| − No competing risks considered | ||
| Colorectal cancer | US Preventive Services Task Force [ | The USPSTF recommends against the routine use of aspirin and nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs to prevent colorectal cancer in individuals at average risk for colorectal cancer. |
Weights assigned to outcomes included in the benefit-harm analyses of low dose aspirin for primary prevention of cardiovascular disease and colorectal cancer
| Outcome | 5-year survival | Weight |
|---|---|---|
| Myocardial infarction [ | 79.2 % | 0.5 |
| Ischemic stroke [ | 42.0 % | 1.0 |
| Hemorrhagic stroke [ | 42.0 % | 1.0 |
| Gastrointestinal bleeds [ | 45.5 % (3-year) | 1.0 |
| Colorectal cancer [ | 65.2 % | 0.5 |
| Biliary cancer [ | 18.3 % | 1.0 |
| Esophageal cancer [ | 18.3 % | 1.0 |
| Gastric cancer [ | 30.3 % | 1.0 |
| Breast cancer [ | 89.6 % | 0.5 |
| Lung cancer [ | 18.0 % | 1.0 |
| Prostate cancer [ | 98.9 % | 0.1 |
| Hematological cancer [ | 48.5 –85.8 % | 0.5 |
| Pancreatic cancer [ | 7.9 % | 1.0 |
| Bladder cancer [ | 77.4 % | 0.5 |
| Gynecological cancer [ | 45.8 –81.6 % | 0.5 |
| Renal cancer [ | 73.6 % | 0.5 |
These weights can be adjusted individually on [http://www.benefit-harm-balance.com]
Fig. 1Benefit-Harm Chart for low dose aspirin on [http://www.benefit-harm-balance.com]. The Benefit-Harm Charts inform about the benefit-harm balance of low dose aspirin based on a patient’s risk profile. Benefit outcomes are (prevented) MI, severe ischemic stroke, and cancers, and harm outcomes are (excess) severe GI bleed and severe hemorrhagic stroke. In the first step the risk profile of an individual is determined using risk factors for the benefit and harm outcomes. Ideally, and to facilitate risk prediction, a computer processes the information on risk factors saved in the electronic patient chart and provides the 10-year risk estimates. In this example, the 60-year old woman has a 10-year risk of 6 % for MI, 6 % for severe ischemic stroke, 0.03 % for hemorrhagic stroke, 5 % for severe GI bleed (non-smoker, high blood pressure treated with atenolol tablet 50 mg per day, no diabetes, no history of gastric ulcer, no atrial fibrillation, no left-ventricular hypertrophy but chronic lower back pain; systolic blood pressure 145 mm Hg, total cholesterol 170 mg/dL, HDL cholesterol 55 mg/dL, takes ibuprofen tablet 200 mg twice a day. She eats vegetables regularly and is physically active. There is no prior history of colorectal cancer in her family). Using the online calculator [http://www.benefit-harm-balance.com] the Benefit-Harm Chart shows for specific outcome preferences (rulers on top) and for each combination of outcome risks (four 5x5 tables) the probability that aspirin provides more benefits than harms (red colored cells <40 % of the 100,000 repetitions with index >0, yellow colored cells 40–60 %, and green colored cells >60 % probability). For the 60-year old woman, the Benefit-Harm Chart shows that she is likely to experience more harms than benefits from aspirin
Fig. 2Benefit-Harm Chart for low dose aspirin for women and men. The Benefit-Harm Charts show the benefit-harm balance for four age categories and, within age categories, for 25 different combinations of 10-year risks for MI and severe GI bleeds. A comparison between women and men (for example, using age category 55–64 years) suggests that more men are likely to benefit from low dose aspirin than women. It is important to note that the Benefit-Harm Charts presented here focus on very low up to moderately high risks for MI (0–25 % 10-year risk) and severe GI bleeds (0–15 % 10-year risk). If the 10-year risks of severe GI bleeds are above 20 or 30 % (in elderly men and women who experienced gastric ulcers in the past [41]), the benefit-harm balance becomes unfavorable again since the number of excess severe GI bleeds under aspirin is high
Fig. 3Impact of preferences on the benefit-harm balance. The two figures show the impact of putting different weights on the outcomes. In the upper Benefit-Harm Chart severe gastrointestinal bleeds are weighted substantially more than in the lower Benefit-Harm Chart. For more scenarios that reflect different preferences and outcome risks, refer to [http://www.benefit-harm-balance.com]