Santilli Francesca, Albrecht Gerhard, Blaha Michael, Lanas Angel, Li Li, Sibbing Dirk
Department of Medicine and Aging and Center for Advanced Studies and Technology, University of Chieti, Chieti, Italy.
Medical & Clinical Affairs Consumer Health, Bayer U.S. L.L.C., Whippany, NJ, United States.
Am J Prev Cardiol. 2024 Apr 15;18:100675. doi: 10.1016/j.ajpc.2024.100675. eCollection 2024 Jun.
Cardiovascular disease (CVD) remains the leading cause of death worldwide. The risk of a cardiovascular (CV) event is not static and increases along a continuum, making identification and management complex. Aspirin has been the cornerstone of antiplatelet therapy in CV risk reduction and remains the only antiplatelet agent with current guideline recommendations throughout the CV risk continuum. In light of recent trials, the role of aspirin in CVD prevention in asymptomatic patients has been downgraded in clinical guidelines. However, a substantial proportion of asymptomatic patients have underlying conditions, such as advanced subclinical atherosclerosis that are associated with high CV risk. Advanced subclinical atherosclerosis has not been extensively investigated in patients in clinical trials but in the absence of significant bleeding risks, patients with subclinical atherosclerosis may particularly benefit from preventive aspirin therapy. Recent studies and clinical guidelines support the need for a personalized treatment approach for these patients, balancing their risk of future CV events against their relative bleeding risk. In this commentary, we first discussed various tools and strategies currently available for assessing CV and bleeding risks; we then provided two hypothetical cases to outline how these tools can be implemented for optimal management of patients with no prior CV events who, nonetheless, are susceptible to CVD. The first case details a young and apparently healthy patient with underlying advanced subclinical atherosclerosis; whereas the second case describes a patient with recently diagnosed type 2 diabetes mellitus who is at higher risk of CVD than their non-diabetic counterparts. For both cases, we considered patient clinical characteristics, CV and bleeding risks, as well as other risk factors to evaluate the appropriate treatment strategy and determine whether patients would obtain a net clinical benefit from low-dose aspirin therapy. These cases can serve as examples to guide clinical decision-making on the use of low-dose aspirin for primary CVD prevention and improve CVD management via a personalized approach.
心血管疾病(CVD)仍然是全球首要死因。心血管(CV)事件的风险并非一成不变,而是沿着一个连续体增加,这使得识别和管理变得复杂。阿司匹林一直是降低CV风险的抗血小板治疗的基石,并且仍然是在整个CV风险连续体中具有当前指南推荐的唯一抗血小板药物。鉴于最近的试验,阿司匹林在无症状患者的CVD预防中的作用在临床指南中已被降级。然而,相当一部分无症状患者存在潜在疾病,如与高CV风险相关的晚期亚临床动脉粥样硬化。晚期亚临床动脉粥样硬化在临床试验患者中尚未得到广泛研究,但在没有显著出血风险的情况下,亚临床动脉粥样硬化患者可能特别受益于预防性阿司匹林治疗。最近的研究和临床指南支持对这些患者采用个性化治疗方法的必要性,平衡他们未来CV事件的风险与相对出血风险。在本评论中,我们首先讨论了目前可用于评估CV和出血风险的各种工具和策略;然后我们提供了两个假设案例,以概述如何实施这些工具来对无既往CV事件但易患CVD的患者进行最佳管理。第一个案例详细描述了一名年轻且看似健康但存在潜在晚期亚临床动脉粥样硬化的患者;而第二个案例描述了一名最近诊断为2型糖尿病的患者,其CVD风险高于非糖尿病患者。对于这两个案例,我们考虑了患者的临床特征、CV和出血风险以及其他风险因素,以评估适当的治疗策略,并确定患者是否会从低剂量阿司匹林治疗中获得净临床益处。这些案例可作为示例,指导关于使用低剂量阿司匹林进行原发性CVD预防的临床决策,并通过个性化方法改善CVD管理。