Is an aspirin a day a good idea?
Millions of people take aspirin
every day to lower their heart
attack and stroke
risk, but new research may change some of that thinking. Daily aspirin use was associated with a
higher-than-expected increase in the risk for major bleeding in an Italian
study published this week in the Journal of the American Medical
Association.The risk for serious bleeds was five times
higher than has been reported in clinical trials of daily low-dose aspirin,
says researcher Antonio Nicolucci, MD.
He noted that while daily aspirin therapy has
been proven to lower the risk for a second heart attack or
stroke in people who have already suffered one, the treatment's usefulness for
preventing a first heart attack or stroke is not so clear.
"People with a moderate-to-high risk for
having a major cardiovascular event probably benefit from aspirin therapy, but
the risks may outweigh the benefits for people with a lower risk,"
Nicolucci tells WebMD.
Diabetes Linked to
Bleeding Risk
Nicolucci and colleagues set out to examine
how daily aspirin use affected the risk for major bleeds in people with and
without diabetes.
To do this they followed close to 186,000
adults on daily low-dose aspirin therapy and the same number of people who did
not take aspirin regularly for an average of about six years.
During the follow-up, about 2,500 people were
hospitalized for bleeding in the brain and close to
4,500 were hospitalized for gastrointestinal bleeding.
The researchers were surprised to find that
patients with diabetes had a 36% increased risk for these potentially
life-threatening bleeding episodes even when they did not take aspirin. Aspirin
use did not appear to influence this risk for people with diabetes one way or
another.
Diabetes is a major risk factor for heart
attack and stroke, and low-dose aspirin is recommended for most diabetic men
over age 50 and diabetic women over 60 when other heart disease and
stroke risk factors are present.
American Heart Association past President
Robert Eckel, MD, says more study is needed to understand the impact of
diabetes on bleeding risk.
"The finding that diabetes in and of
itself conveys a risk for bleeding is a new one," he tells WebMD.
Statins May Lower
Bleeding Risk
The study also suggested a protective role
for cholesterol-lowering
statin drugs against
bleeding.
Taking statins was associated with a lower
risk for both gastrointestinal and brain bleeding.
Nicolucci says the study's findings highlight
the importance of considering an individual patient's cardiovascular and
bleeding risk when aspirin therapy is being considered.
"Many things influence bleeding risk,
including the use of anti-inflammatory pain drugs, other
drugs, and even alcohol and smoking," he
says.
Eckel, a professor of medicine, physiology,
and biophysics at the University of Colorado in Denver, echoes the researcher's
sentiments.
"We have known for some time that
aspirin therapy is associated with a higher risk for bleeding," he says.
"That is why it is so important for patients to understand their bleeding
risk before starting treatment."
Article By Salynn Boyles/ Photo by Getty
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