Aspirin could be as
effective as more expensive drugs for heart failure patients with a normal
heart rhythm, according to researchers. Their study on more than 2,000 patients, published in the New
England Journal of Medicine, said aspirin was as effective as the commonly
prescribed drug warfarin. It said each drug had risks, but they had similar
benefits overall. However, a UK cardiologist argued the risks from warfarin
were less serious. Heart failure is a major health problem in many parts of the
world. It affects 900,000 people in the UK and six million people in the US. A
failing heart struggles to pump blood around the body, meaning even trivial
tasks become exhausting. As the blood is not pumped round the body as
efficiently the risk of a blood clot increases, if a clot blocks blood to parts
of the brain it will result in a stroke.
Aspirin vs warfarin
Patients are treated
with drugs to reduce the risk of a fatal blood clot forming. However,
researchers said it was unknown whether aspirin or warfarin was the better
treatment in the 75% of heart failure patients who still have a normal heart
beat. Researchers gave 2,305 patients, in 11 countries, either aspirin or
warfarin. The combined risk of death, stroke and major bleeding was the same
for each drug, according to the researchers. Patients taking warfarin had a
much lower risk of stroke, but had a high risk of bleeds. They said that after
four years there was a "small benefit" with warfarin, but it was
"borderline" and of "uncertain clinical significance". They
concluded: "There is no compelling reason to use warfarin rather than
aspirin". The lead researcher, Dr Shunichi Homma, from the Columbia
University Medical Center, said: "Since the overall risks and benefits are
similar for aspirin and warfarin, the patient and his or her doctor are free to
choose the treatment that best meets their particular medical needs. "However,
given the convenience and low cost of aspirin, many may go this route."
Balancing risks
However, Dr Andrew
Clark, from the British Society for Heart Failure and the University of Hull,
told the BBC: "The study shown here demonstrates that warfarin quite
markedly reduces the risk of stroke associated with heart failure compared with
aspirin, but at a cost of an increase in major haemorrhage. "How to
interpret that for individual patients means weighing the risk of stroke
against the risk of haemorrhage, but also weighting that by importance. "I
would regard a gastrointestinal haemorrhage requiring transfusion as being of
less importance than a stroke, so would tend in favour of warfarin. "I
would be more inclined to prescribe warfarin than previously, but the evidence
is not overwhelming." The British Heart Foundation said both warfarin and
aspirin had risks and benefits, but this study showed "neither has an
advantage over the other overall in preventing stroke or death in the long
term." Ellen Mason, a senior cardiac nurse at the charity, said:
"This finding should give patients reassurance when discussing their
medication with their heart failure specialist, and more freedom to choose the
treatment which works best for them." Dr Walter Koroshetz, who is the
deputy director of the US National Institute for Neurological Disorders and
Stroke, said the study would have "a large public health impact". He
added: "Patients and their physicians now have critical information to
help select the optimum treatment. "The key decision will be whether to
accept the increased risk of stroke with aspirin, or the increased risk of
primarily gastrointestinal haemorrhage with warfarin."
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