Low dose aspirin doesn't help prevent strokes and increases brain bleed risk in the over 70s

Publicly released:
Australia; VIC; WA; TAS
Photo by Towfiqu barbhuiya on Unsplash
Photo by Towfiqu barbhuiya on Unsplash

A reanalysis of Australian clinical trial data has confirmed that for healthy people over 70, taking low-dose aspirin once a day is linked to a significant increase in brain bleeds with no reduction in the risk of stroke. The study is a reanalysis of the Australian-led ASPREE study and extends the trails findings by focusing on stroke and bleeding events. The authors say the data support recent recommendations that low-dose aspirin should not be prescribed for primary prevention in healthy older adults.

Media release

From: Monash University

A Monash University-led study has found that the risk of brain bleeding outweighs any potential benefit of reducing the risk of strokes in healthy older adults who take daily low dose aspirin.

Published in JAMA Network Open, this is the first major investigation into the risk/benefit of aspirin as a primary prevention measure in older people, who are often exposed to head trauma through falls and other knocks to the head. Bleeding is a known side effect of aspirin.

Researchers drew on data from ASPREE (ASPirin in Reducing Events in the Elderly), a primary prevention aspirin trial involving more than 19,000 initially healthy older adults, mostly over the age of 70, the vast majority in Australia and the rest in the USA.

Primary prevention involves actions to preserve health and prevent adverse health events. Secondary prevention interventions are taken after a health event to avoid it happening again.

The participants, who did not have known cardiovascular disease when they entered the study, were randomly assigned 100 mg daily aspirin or placebo tablet for an average of five years.

The secondary analysis study found no statistically significant difference in the incidence of ischemic stroke - the most common type of stroke, caused by a blockage in vessels carrying blood to the brain - between the aspirin and placebo group.

Overall, strokes were reported in 4.6 per cent of the aspirin group and 4.7 per cent in the placebo group. While the number of brain bleeds was small, bleeding events were 38 per cent higher in those who took aspirin compared to placebo.

The researchers concluded that the risk of brain bleeding outweighed any potential benefit in reducing strokes. This included bleeds into the brain, and bleeds on the brain surface which are commonly associated with head trauma.

“These findings suggest that low-dose aspirin may have no role for the primary prevention of stroke and that caution should be taken with use of aspirin in older persons prone to head trauma e.g. from falls,” the researchers wrote.

Senior Author Professor John McNeil said the study underlined possible risks for some, but older people taking aspirin should not stop doing so without consulting with their GP.

“Although the overall incidence of bleeding was not common, it highlighted another risk of low-dose aspirin, especially relevant to older people susceptible to head trauma,” Professor McNeil said.

“These findings do not apply to older adults taking aspirin on medical advice, such as after a heart attack and ischaemic stroke. In secondary prevention, the balance of risks and benefits generally favours aspirin. It’s important to consult with your GP before making any changes to your medicine intake.”

First author and Director of Stroke Services at Alfred Health, Professor Geoffrey Cloud, said people could reduce their risk of stroke by living a healthy lifestyle.

“Older people concerned about reducing their risk of having their first stroke should not take daily aspirin without their doctor’s advice but instead concentrate on modification of lifestyle risk factors and blood pressure control,” he said.

About ASPREE

The Monash University-led ASPREE trial (ASPirin in Reducing Events in the Elderly) of more than 19,000 participants in Australia and the US was the first trial to show that aspirin did not prolong healthy lifespan in initially healthy older individuals, mostly aged 70 and older. 
Visit: https://aspree.org/aus/

ASPREE was funded by the National Institutes of Health (USA) the NHMRC (Australia), Monash University and the Victorian Cancer Agency and is led by Monash University in Australia and the Berman Center for Outcomes & Clinical Research in the US.

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Research JAMA, Web page Please link to the article in online versions of your report (the URL will go live after the embargo ends).
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conference:
JAMA Network Open
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Organisation/s: Monash University, Curtin University, University of Tasmania, The University of Melbourne
Funder: The Aspirin in Reducing Events in the Elderly (ASPREE) study was funded by grants U01AG029824 and U19AG062682 from the National Institute on Aging and by the National Cancer Institute at the National Institutes of Health and 334047 and 1127060 from the National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC) of Australia and by Monash University and the Victorian Cancer Agency. Dr McNeil was supported by NHMRC leadership fellowship IG1173690.
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