Department of Pharmacy Practice, University at Buffalo School of Pharmacy & Pharmaceutical Sciences, Buffalo, NY, USA.
School of Medicine, University of Missouri - Kansas City, Kansas City, MO, USA.
Cardiovasc Ther. 2017 Aug;35(4). doi: 10.1111/1755-5922.12268.
Bariatric surgery has emerged as a promising treatment option for weight loss and to counter the metabolic consequences of obesity. Obesity has been linked to a hyperaggregable state, as well as a blunted response to aspirin. This pilot study assessed the hypothesis that bariatric surgery would lead to an improvement in aspirin-induced platelet inhibition and a reduction in platelet aggregability.
Fifteen patients scheduled to undergo bariatric surgery were administered two 7-day courses of aspirin 81 mg: the first course administered before surgery and the second was 3 months following surgery. Platelet aggregation was measured before and after each aspirin course using VerifyNow-Aspirin. The primary endpoint was the change in on-treatment aspirin reactive units (ARU) pre- and postsurgery. Data from bariatric surgery study patients were compared to data of normal weighted subjects gathered in a previous study.
Roux-en-Y gastric bypass was performed in 80%, and 20% underwent sleeve gastrectomy. The mean starting body mass index (BMI) was 46.9 kg/m . Patients lost on average 24.5 kg, resulting in a postsurgical BMI of 38.5 kg/m . Postbariatric surgery, off-treatment ARU was significantly reduced from presurgery levels (602±59 vs 531±78; P=.035). On-aspirin platelet reactivity was also significantly reduced following surgery (469±60 vs 432±143, P=.03). There was a significant correlation between the extent of weight loss and the degree of improvement in on-aspirin platelet reactivity (r =.49, P=.024). Presurgery on-aspirin platelet reactivity was significantly higher in obese patients compared to normal weighted subjects (469±60 vs 419±52; P=.016) and reduced to the baseline after the surgery (432±63 vs 419±52; P=.54).
Aspirin-induced platelet inhibition may be more potent following bariatric surgery. The mechanisms behind this improvement require further investigation.
减重手术已成为一种有前途的减肥治疗选择,并能对抗肥胖引起的代谢后果。肥胖与血小板高聚集状态以及阿司匹林反应性降低有关。本研究旨在评估减重手术是否会改善阿司匹林诱导的血小板抑制作用并降低血小板聚集性。
对 15 例拟行减重手术的患者进行了两次 7 天的阿司匹林 81mg 治疗:第一次治疗在手术前进行,第二次治疗在手术后 3 个月进行。在每次阿司匹林治疗前后使用 VerifyNow-Aspirin 测量血小板聚集。主要终点是手术前后治疗中阿司匹林反应单位(ARU)的变化。将减重手术研究患者的数据与先前研究中正常体重受试者的数据进行比较。
80%的患者接受了 Roux-en-Y 胃旁路手术,20%的患者接受了袖状胃切除术。平均起始体重指数(BMI)为 46.9kg/m²。患者平均减重 24.5kg,术后 BMI 为 38.5kg/m²。术后,未治疗时的 ARU 明显低于术前水平(602±59 与 531±78;P=.035)。手术后,阿司匹林抑制的血小板反应性也显著降低(469±60 与 432±143,P=.03)。术后体重减轻程度与阿司匹林抑制血小板反应性改善程度呈显著相关性(r=.49,P=.024)。与正常体重的受试者相比,肥胖患者术前的阿司匹林抑制血小板反应性显著升高(469±60 与 419±52;P=.016),术后降至基线水平(432±63 与 419±52;P=.54)。
减重手术后,阿司匹林诱导的血小板抑制作用可能更强。这种改善的机制需要进一步研究。