| Literature DB >> 29880847 |
Valerio De Stefano1, Bianca Rocca2, Alberto Tosetto3, Denise Soldati4, Giovanna Petrucci2, Eloise Beggiato5, Irene Bertozzi6, Silvia Betti4, Giuseppe Carli3, Monica Carpenedo7, Daniele Cattaneo8, Viviana Cavalca9, Alfredo Dragani10, Elena Elli7, Guido Finazzi11, Alessandra Iurlo8, Giuseppe Lanzarone5, Laura Lissandrini3, Francesca Palandri12, Chiara Paoli13, Alessandro Rambaldi11,14, Paola Ranalli10, Maria Luigia Randi6, Alessandra Ricco15, Elena Rossi4, Marco Ruggeri3, Giorgina Specchia16, Andrea Timillero16, Linda Turnu9, Nicola Vianelli12, Alessandro M Vannucchi13, Francesco Rodeghiero16, Carlo Patrono2.
Abstract
Once-daily (od), low-dose aspirin (75-100 mg) is recommended to reduce the thrombotic risk of patients with essential thrombocytemia (ET). This practice is based on data extrapolated from other high-risk patients and an aspirin trial in polycythemia vera, with the assumption of similar aspirin pharmacodynamics in the two settings. However, the pharmacodynamics of low-dose aspirin is impaired in ET, reflecting accelerated renewal of platelet cyclooxygenase (COX)-1. ARES is a parallel-arm, placebo-controlled, randomized, dose-finding, phase II trial enrolling 300 ET patients to address two main questions. First, whether twice or three times 100 mg aspirin daily dosing is superior to the standard od regimen in inhibiting platelet thromboxane (TX)A2 production, without inhibiting vascular prostacyclin biosynthesis. Second, whether long-term persistence of superior biochemical efficacy can be safely maintained with multiple vs. single dosing aspirin regimen. Considering that the primary study end point is serum TXB2, a surrogate biomarker of clinical efficacy, a preliminary exercise of reproducibility and validation of this biomarker across all the 11 participating centers was implemented. The results of this preliminary phase demonstrate the importance of controlling reproducibility of biomarkers in multicenter trials and the feasibility of using serum TXB2 as a reliable end point for dose-finding studies of novel aspirin regimens.Entities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29880847 PMCID: PMC5992153 DOI: 10.1038/s41408-018-0078-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Blood Cancer J ISSN: 2044-5385 Impact factor: 11.037