Kaiser Permanente Evidence-based Practice Center, Center for Health Research, Kaiser Permanente, Portland, Oregon.
Department of Family Medicine, University of Washington, Tacoma.
JAMA. 2022 Apr 26;327(16):1585-1597. doi: 10.1001/jama.2022.3337.
Low-dose aspirin is used for primary cardiovascular disease prevention and may have benefits for colorectal cancer prevention.
To review the benefits and harms of aspirin in primary cardiovascular disease prevention and colorectal cancer prevention to inform the US Preventive Services Task Force.
MEDLINE, PubMed, Embase, and the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials through January 2021; literature surveillance through January 21, 2022.
English-language randomized clinical trials (RCTs) of low-dose aspirin (≤100 mg/d) compared with placebo or no intervention in primary prevention populations.
Single extraction, verified by a second reviewer. Quantitative synthesis using Peto fixed-effects meta-analysis.
Cardiovascular disease events and mortality, all-cause mortality, colorectal cancer incidence and mortality, major bleeding, and hemorrhagic stroke.
Eleven RCTs (N = 134 470) and 1 pilot trial (N = 400) of low-dose aspirin for primary cardiovascular disease prevention were included. Low-dose aspirin was associated with a significant decrease in major cardiovascular disease events (odds ratio [OR], 0.90 [95% CI, 0.85-0.95]; 11 RCTs [n = 134 470]; I2 = 0%; range in absolute effects, -2.5% to 0.1%). Results for individual cardiovascular disease outcomes were significant, with similar magnitude of benefit. Aspirin was not significantly associated with reductions in cardiovascular disease mortality or all-cause mortality. There was limited trial evidence on benefits for colorectal cancer, with the findings highly variable by length of follow-up and statistically significant only when considering long-term observational follow-up beyond randomized trial periods. Low-dose aspirin was associated with significant increases in total major bleeding (OR, 1.44 [95% CI, 1.32-1.57]; 10 RCTs [n = 133 194]; I2 = 4.7%; range in absolute effects, 0.1% to 1.0%) and in site-specific bleeding, with similar magnitude.
Low-dose aspirin was associated with small absolute risk reductions in major cardiovascular disease events and small absolute increases in major bleeding. Colorectal cancer results were less robust and highly variable.
小剂量阿司匹林用于一级心血管疾病预防,可能对预防结直肠癌有益。
综述小剂量阿司匹林用于一级心血管疾病预防和结直肠癌预防的获益和危害,为美国预防服务工作组提供信息。
通过 2021 年 1 月的 MEDLINE、PubMed、Embase 和 Cochrane 对照试验中心注册库进行检索;通过 2022 年 1 月 21 日的文献监测进行检索。
英语随机临床试验(RCT),比较小剂量阿司匹林(≤100mg/d)与安慰剂或无干预在一级预防人群中的效果。
单一提取,由第二位审阅者验证。使用 Peto 固定效应荟萃分析进行定量综合。
心血管疾病事件和死亡率、全因死亡率、结直肠癌发病率和死亡率、大出血和出血性卒中。
纳入了 11 项 RCT(N=134470)和 1 项关于小剂量阿司匹林用于一级心血管疾病预防的初步试验(N=400)。小剂量阿司匹林与主要心血管疾病事件显著减少相关(比值比[OR],0.90 [95%置信区间,0.85-0.95];11 项 RCT [n=134470];I2=0%;绝对效应范围,-2.5%至 0.1%)。个别心血管疾病结局的结果显著,获益程度相似。阿司匹林与心血管疾病死亡率或全因死亡率降低无关。关于结直肠癌获益的试验证据有限,随访时间长短差异很大,只有在考虑随机试验期后长期观察随访时才具有统计学意义。小剂量阿司匹林与总大出血(OR,1.44 [95%置信区间,1.32-1.57];10 项 RCT [n=133194];I2=4.7%;绝对效应范围,0.1%至 1.0%)和特定部位出血显著增加相关,获益程度相似。
小剂量阿司匹林与主要心血管疾病事件的绝对风险降低幅度较小和大出血的绝对风险增加幅度较小相关。结直肠癌的结果不太稳健,且差异较大。