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Item #5
Aspirin
Superior In Preventing Cardiovascular Events
Aspirin
is at least as good as, and perhaps superior to, ticlopidine in
preventing major cardiovascular events in African American
survivors of ischemic stroke,
That,
according to a study of 1,800 patients presented at the 28th
International Stroke Conference.
An interim analysis found a less than 1% chance that the
antiplatelet drug ticlopidine would prove to be better than
aspirin at reducing the risk of recurrent stroke, myocardial
infarction, or death in a high-risk African American population.
When the blinded portion of the African American Antiplatelet
Stroke Prevention Study (AAASPS) was halted prematurely in
mid-2002, ticlopidine and aspirin did not differ significantly in
terms of the primary end point of preventing stroke, MI, or death.
But when the researchers looked solely at the secondary end point
of fatal or nonfatal recurrent stroke, aspirin's protective
superiority did approach significance (P value of 0.083).
Almost 5 years into the trial, it became clear to biostatisticians
that there was virtually no chance that ticlopidine would prevail.
There was an estimated 40%-50% chance that aspirin would prove to
be the more protective agent overall by the study's scheduled
conclusion in October 2003.
“Our data suggest that ticlopidine is unlikely to be superior to
aspirin in preventing recurrent stroke and other major vascular
events. Aspirin is inexpensive, readily available, easy to use,
and relatively safe,” said DeJuran Richardson, Ph.D., a member
of the preventive medicine faculty at Rush Medical College in
Chicago and a study investigator. “Ticlopidine is more
expensive, [is] labor intensive to use, and may have a less
favorable and potentially serious adverse event profile.”
Aspirin should be considered a “reasonable initial choice” for
recurrent stroke prevention in African Americans who are aspirin
tolerant and who have suffered noncardioembolic, ischemic strokes,
Dr. Richardson said at the conference sponsored by the American
Stroke Association.
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