Aspirin not recommended for healthy elderly: ESC 2019 Update

Published On 2019-08-31 11:56 GMT   |   Update On 2021-08-10 09:56 GMT

Daily low-dose aspirin cannot be recommended in healthy people over 70 – even in those at the greatest cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk, according to results from ASPREE trial. The results of the study were presented at the European Society of Cardiology (ESC) Congress 2019 held in Paris, France, together with the World Congress of Cardiology (WCC).


According to the study, low-dose aspirin had no effect on disability-free survival or cardiovascular benefit in healthy people aged 70 years or over with no known cardiovascular disease.


The primary finding was that in people aged 70 years or over with no known CVD, there was no effect of 100 mg of daily aspirin on the composite primary endpoint of disability-free survival (defined as those not reaching a primary endpoint of dementia or persistent physical disability or death). The primary endpoint was chosen to reflect the reasons for prescribing a preventive drug in an otherwise healthy elderly population.


"An ever-increasing number of people reach the age of 70 without overt cardiovascular disease (CVD). This analysis suggests that improved risk prediction methods are needed to identify those who could benefit from daily low-dose aspirin, said Professor Christopher Reid of Curtin University, Perth, Australia.


European guidelines on the prevention of CVD do not recommend aspirin for individuals free from CVD due to the increased risk of major bleeding. This advice was subsequently supported by results in moderate-risk patients (ARRIVE) diabetic patients (ASCEND), and in people over 70 (ASPREE) which demonstrated that modest reductions in CVD risk were outweighed by the increased bleeding hazard.


This analysis examined whether the results for the primary endpoint of disability-free survival might vary by the baseline level of CVD risk. Analyses were also conducted for the secondary endpoints of all-cause mortality, major haemorrhage, and prevention of CVD (defined as fatal coronary heart disease, nonfatal myocardial infarction, fatal or nonfatal stroke, or hospitalisation for heart failure).


The investigators calculated ten-year CVD risk probabilities at baseline for the 19,114 ASPREE participants using the Framingham score (up to 75 years) and the atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease (ASCVD) pooled cohort risk equations (up to 79 years) and divided them into thirds. As there are no CVD risk scores available beyond the age ranges specified in the equations, they also classified participants according to the presence of 0 to 1, 2 to 3, or more than 3 CVD risk factors. Overall rates of disability-free survival, mortality, major bleeding and CVD were examined for each risk group and outcomes were compared for those treated with aspirin or placebo.


Key findings of the study include:

  • For participants in the lowest third of CVD risk, by both Framingham and ASCVD scores, there was no disability-free survival or cardiovascular benefit from aspirin. This group also had the highest likelihood of bleeding.

  • Those in the highest third of CVD risk, by both Framingham and ASCVD scores, had significantly lower CVD event rates on aspirin with similar rates of bleeding.

  • Hazard ratios for CVD reduction with aspirin version placebo were 0.72 for the group classified as high risk by the Framingham score and 0.75 for those defined as high risk by the ASCVD equations. However, this reduction in CVD did not translate to a significantly improved disability-free survival.

  • Hazard ratios for disability-free survival with aspirin versus placebo were 0.86 for the group designated high risk by the Framingham score and 0.89 for those considered high risk by the ASCVD equations.


"The findings emphasise that the risk-benefit trade-off for aspirin use in healthy older men and women varies across levels of cardiovascular risk. It also indicates that the reduction in CVD events in the highest risk groups using current stratification methods does not identify individuals in whom this advantage translates into longer disability-free survival, said, professor Reid.


New ways to identify groups at increased CVD risk, beyond the use of conventional risk factors and current prediction models, will be investigated in the ASPREE longitudinal follow-up study. Genetic and biomarker information will be included from the ASPREE biobank.


"Based on the results of the main ASPREE trial, daily low-dose aspirin cannot be recommended in healthy people over 70 – even in those at the greatest CVD risk. The analysis indicates that more refined methods are needed to pinpoint a subgroup who might gain from preventive therapy," concluded the authors.

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