Many Americans mistakenly use aspirin
to prevent heart disease
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[July 23, 2019]
By Linda Carroll
(Reuters Health) - - Many Americans
regularly take aspirin without a doctor's recommendation, believing it
will protect their hearts, a new study finds. The problem is that for
those who don't already have heart disease, aspirin comes with some
dangerous side effects, such as brain bleeds, experts say.
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While doctors used to support daily consumption of low-dose aspirin
to prevent heart attacks and stroke, three major clinical trials in
early 2018 found the risks of the drug outweighed any benefits in
people who did not already have heart disease. The trials led the
American Heart Association and the American College of Cardiology to
change clinical practice guidelines and to warn that any benefit
from taking a daily low-dose aspirin would be more than offset by
the danger of internal bleeding and other side effects in people
considered to be at low or moderate risk for heart disease.
That's why the findings of the new study, published in Annals of
Internal Medicine, are so worrisome, said coauthor Dr. Christina
Wee, a researcher and general internist at Beth Israel Deaconess
Medical Center and an associate professor of medicine at the Harvard
Medical School.
"We found that one quarter of adults 40 and older who don't have
heart disease are taking aspirin regularly," Wee said "And more
concerning, one half of adults over age 70 who don't have heart
disease or stroke are taking aspirin regularly. Aspirin will raise
the risk of bleeding and ulcer development regardless of age, but
the older you get the more at risk you are anyway."
While the data used in the study were collected before the new
guidelines came out, "we suspect things haven't changed much," Wee
said.
The data came from the Sample Adult component of the 2017 National
Health Interview Survey (NHIS), a nationally representative
in-person household survey of health and disability in U.S. adults.
Wee and her colleagues analyzed responses from 14,328 survey
participants whose average age was 57.5 years. Among those aged 40
and older who did not have heart disease, 23.4% reported taking
daily aspirin to protect their hearts. Extrapolated, that would work
out to be approximately 29 million Americans. Of these, 22.8%
(representing 6. 6 million) were doing so without their doctor's
recommendation.
Nearly half (44.6%) of adults aged 70 or older without
cardiovascular disease said they were using aspirin to prevent heart
disease. And having a history of ulcers didn't seem to prevent these
seniors from taking a daily aspirin.
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Overall, Wee and her colleagues estimate that nearly 30 million U.S.
adults aged 40 and older are using aspirin to prevent cardiovascular
disease, including nearly half of seniors who said they did not have
heart disease and one quarter of adults with no heart disease but a
history of ulcers.
Wee is not recommending that everyone stop taking aspirin. Rather,
she said, before making any changes, people should discuss the issue
with their doctors. That's because it can be difficult to calculate
one's exact risk of heart disease, Wee said, noting that aspirin is
still recommended for some.
Further, Wee said, "I want to emphasize that these new guidelines
are referring only to people who don't have heart disease, haven't
had a stroke and don't have some other compelling reason to be on
aspirin."
The new findings "are certainly a call to action," said Dr. Prashant
Vaishnava, a cardiologist at The Mount Sinai Hospital and director
of Quality and Inpatient Services for Mount Sinai Heart, in New York
City. "It highlights that there are more than six million people
taking low dose aspirin every day without a physician's
recommendation."
A separate study recently published in JAMA Neurology should give
those folks pause, Vaishnava said. "That was a meta-analysis of
patients without symptoms of heart disease," she said. "It showed an
association between daily aspirin use and intracranial hemorrhage.
Certainly there are harms associated with indiscriminate aspirin use
for primary prevention in low risk populations."
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/30NygT5 Annals of Internal Medicine, online
July 22, 2019.
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