US Dept Of HHS: Low Doses Of Aspirin And Surgery Better For Stroke Prevention
JUN 28, 1999, M2 Communications - A new study shows that lower doses
of aspirin given at the time of surgery work better than higher doses
to prevent strokes. The Aspirin and Carotid Endarterectomy (ACE) trial,
sponsored by the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and
Stroke (NINDS), found that patients given 81 or 325 mg of aspirin a day
for three days before and 3 months after carotid endarterectomy (CE)
surgery had less risk of stroke, heart attack, or death 30 days and 3
months following the surgery than did patients given 650 or 1300 mg a
day. The study will appear in the June 26, 1999, issue of the journal
"The Lancet". 1.
"While a great deal of research has established that aspirin reduces
the risk of stroke in certain patients, the amount of aspirin required
was not clear," says Wayne D. Taylor, M.A., a professor in the
Department of Clinical Epidemiology and Biostatistics at McMaster
University in Hamilton, Ontario, Canada, and lead author of the study.
"This study has answered the dose question for patients who will
receive carotid endarterectomy surgery."
While the results of "The Lancet" study are strong, the investigators
warn against overgeneralizing the benefits of low-dose aspirin for
stroke prevention. The amount of aspirin required to prevent stroke in
the 30 days after surgery may differ from the amount of aspirin that
may be taken for years to prevent strokes in the longer-term medical
management of high-risk stroke patients.
"This trial demonstrates that lower doses of aspirin work well," says
John R. Marler, M.D., a neurologist and program officer at the NINDS.
"This is good news because lower doses are easier to take and better
tolerated, so more people can get the full benefit of aspirin."
The ACE trial is the first randomized clinical trial to determine the
best dose of aspirin for stroke prevention following CE surgery. The
medical community first became aware of aspirin's protective effects
for stroke in 1978, and, since then, several large clinical trials have
shown that aspirin reduces the risk of stroke. The ACE trial resulted
from the observation that aspirin seemed to decrease the risk of stroke
following CE surgery in the North American Stroke and Carotid
Endarterectomy Trial (NASCET).
For more information about the NASCET study and carotid
endarterectomy, visit the NINDS stroke information web page at
http://www.ninds.nih.gov/healinfo/disorder/stroke/str okehp.htm
The NINDS is the nation's premier supporter of research on the brain
and nervous system. It is part of the National Institutes of Health in
Bethesda, Maryland, and will celebrate its 50th anniversary in the year
2000.
1. Taylor, W.D.; Barnett, H.J.M.; Haynes, B.R.; Ferguson, G.G.;
Sackett, D.L.; Thorpe, K.E.; Simard, D.; Silver, F.L.; Hachinski, V.;
Clagett, G.P.; Barnes, R.; Spence, J.D. for the ASA and Carotid
Endarterectomy (ACE) Trial Collaborators. "A randomized trial of low
and high dose aspirin for patients undergoing carotid endarterectomy."
"The Lancet", Vol. 353, No. 9171, June 26, 1999, pp. 2179- 2184.

