Key
Points on low dose aspirin
Yesterday some
of my more well informed and alert patients and friends drew my attention to a
newspaper report of the US preventive task force’s latest recommendation about
low dose aspirin. This short write up is pertaining to the same so that there
is clarity in minds of people.
1. Clotting and bleeding are opposite
phenomena. Agents which prevent clotting can cause bleeding. Aspirin is one
such agent.
2. There are two groups of people for
whom preventive therapy with low dose (LD) aspirin is applicable.
3. One group is composed of those who
already have evidence of arterial disease such as a heart attack, angina,
angioplasty, bypass surgery, ischemic brain stroke or arterial disease of the
limbs.
4. For these people, life-long LD
aspirin (or another antiplatelet drug like clopidogrel) is HIGHLY advisable
because the benefit in terms of preventing another clotting event like a heart
attack far outweighs the risk of bleeding in the gut or the brain-the most important
risk with aspirin. This is called secondary prevention.
5. The other group of people is
composed of those who are apparently healthy and wish to prevent heart attacks
or strokes in future, which is called primary prevention.
6. Some years back, the popular notion was
that LD aspirin should be given to all above 40 years to prevent a heart
attack. This was not based on scientific evidence, but from observation and
impression gathered from population.
7. In the last few years came hard
evidence in form of placebo controlled, randomized trials with aspirin which
showed that for primary prevention, the risk of bleeding may outweigh the
benefit with LD aspirin.
8. Hence in 2019 American College of Cardiology
& American Heart Association recommended that LD aspirin for PRIMARY
PREVENTION is not advisable for people above age 70 or ANYONE at high bleeding
risk.
9. But they said LD aspirin MAY BE
advisable for primary prevention in people between ages of 40 and 70 who are at
high cardiovascular disease risk (such as people with family history of
premature heart disease, people with hypertension, diabetes, high cholesterol,
smokers, obese etc) and low bleeding risk, to prevent heart attacks and colorectal
cancer. It may also be recommended for people who already are on LD aspirin
without side effects.
10. The current US task force’s
recommendation is almost the same as the 2019 recommendation by ACC-AHA except
that the upper age limit is brought down to 60 and prevention of colorectal
cancer is no longer a reason for preventive therapy with LD aspirin.
11. These are general recommendations
for the population. At the individual level, shared decision making with your
cardiologist is recommended after weighing your probability of benefit against
your risk of bleeding with LD aspirin.
12. Lastly, one group of patients that
is not covered by the above scientific bodies is people without any symptoms
but with fatty deposits in their heart, brain or leg arteries as shown by tests
like coronary artery calcium score, coronary CT angiography, doppler showing plaques
in carotid arteries or BP in legs lower than that in arms.
13. Such people (for example with
coronary artery calcium score more than 100 and) at high risk may be well
advised LD aspirin for prevention. Again, shared decision making with your
cardiologist is advisable after discussing the risk-benefit issues.