Aspirin cuts clot risk by a third: study

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Press Trust of India Melbourne
Last Updated : Aug 26 2014 | 3:35 PM IST
Low dose aspirin lowers the occurrence of new venous blood clots - and represents a reasonable treatment option for patients who are not candidates for long-term anticoagulant drugs, scientists say.
"The study provides clear, consistent evidence that low-dose aspirin can help to prevent new venous blood clots and other cardiovascular events among people who are at risk because they have already suffered a blood clot," said the study's lead author, University of Sydney Professor, John Simes.
"The treatment effect of aspirin is less than can be achieved with warfarin or other new generation direct thrombin inhibitors, which can achieve more than an 80 per cent reduction in adverse circulatory and cardiopulmonary events.
"However, aspirin represents a useful treatment option for patients who are not candidates for anticoagulant drugs because of the expense or the increased risk of bleeding associated with anticoagulants," said Simes.
Compared to placebo patients, those who took 100mg daily of aspirin had a one-third reduction in the risk of: thromboembolism, the obstruction of a blood vessel by a clot that has dislodged from another site in the circulation, and deep vein thrombosis (DVT) - the formation of a blood clot in a deep vein, predominantly in the legs.
Aspirin also reduced the risk of pulmonary embolism, a blood clot affecting the arteries that supply blood to the lungs, and myocardial infarction (heart attack), stroke or cardiovascular death, researchers found.
Long-term anticoagulant drugs are expensive and inconvenient, requiring frequent regular blood tests and adjustments to the dosage.
Further, there is an elevated risk that the treatment could cause bleeding in some patients. For people who are not able to cope with this, the viable alternative of taking regular aspirin will be a great benefit.
"The study provides evidence that after a first venous thrombosis or embolism, daily aspirin reduces the risk of another event, without causing undue bleeding.
"This treatment is an alternative to long-term anticoagulation and will be especially useful for patients who do not want the inconvenience of close medical monitoring or the risk of bleeding," said Simes.
"Aspirin will be ideal in the many countries where prolonged anticoagulant treatment is too expensive. A major benefit of this treatment is its cost-effectiveness. Aspirin is cheap, but it will save the treatment costs of the many recurrent clots that are prevented. This could mean a saving of millions of health-care dollars worldwide," Simes said.
The study was published in the journal Circulation.
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First Published: Aug 26 2014 | 3:35 PM IST