Retour
Résumé des données probantes

Qu'est-ce qu'un Résumé des données probantes?

Les messages clés des recherches scientifiques sur lesquels on peut agir

J'ai compris, masquez ceci
  • Cote:

In people who do not have cardiovascular disease, aspirin does not reduce risk for death but does increase major bleeding

Mahmoud AN, Gad MM, Elgendy AY, et al. L'efficacité et la sécurité de l'aspirine en prévention primaire d'événements cardiovasculaires: une méta-analyse et analyse séquentielle d'essais d'essais contrôlés randomisés. Eur Heart J. 2019;40:607-17.

Review questions

In people who do not have cardiovascular disease, does aspirin reduce risk for death? Does it increase bleeding events?

Background

Aspirin is often taken by people who have had a heart attack or stroke to prevent these events from happening again. When blood clots form inside the vessels that take blood to your heart or your brain, blood flow is reduced; this can lead to a heart attack or stroke. Aspirin works by reducing your blood’s ability to clot.

For years, doctors have recommended that some older adults who have never had a heart attack or stroke take an aspirin a day to prevent these events. However, aspirin can cause bleeding, and it wasn’t clear if taking aspirin daily causes more harm than good.

This review looks at whether aspirin reduces deaths and increases major bleeding in people who do not have cardiovascular disease (e.g., a history of heart attack, stroke, or blood clots in the arteries in their legs).

How the review was done

The researchers did a systematic review of studies available up to September 2018. They found 11 randomized controlled trials that included 157,248 people with an average age of 61 years. About half of the people in the studies were women.

The key features of the studies were:

  • people did not have cardiovascular disease at the start of the studies;
  • most trials used aspirin at a dose of 75 to 100 mg/day;
  • most trials compared aspirin with placebo; some compared aspirin with another group that didn’t get aspirin; and
  • people were followed for an average of 6.6 years.

What the researchers found

Compared with placebo or no treatment, aspirin

  • increased bleeding inside the skull or brain and other major bleeding;
  • reduced risk for heart attacks; and
  • did not affect risks for death or stroke.

Conclusions

In people who do not have cardiovascular disease, aspirin does not reduce risk for death but does increase risk for major bleeding compared with placebo or no aspirin treatment. It is important to recognize that these results do not apply to people who have a history of heart disease or stroke.

Aspirin vs control* in people who do not have cardiovascular disease

Outcomes

Number of trials and people

Rate of events with aspirin

Rate of events with control

Effect of aspirin at an average 6.6 years of follow-up

Death from any cause

11 trials (157,248 people)

4.6%

4.7%

No difference in effect†

Death from a cardiovascular cause‡

11 trials (157,248 people)

1.3%

1.4%

No difference in effect†

Heart attack

11 trials (157,248 people)

1.9%

2.2%

About 3 fewer people out of 1000 had a heart attack

Stroke

11 trials (157,248 people)

1.7%

1.8%

No difference in effect†

Major bleeding

11 trials (157,248 people)

1.8%

1.2%

About 6 more people out of 1000 had a major bleed

Intracranial bleeding§

11 trials (157,248 people)

0.4%

0.3%

About 1 more person out of 1000 had an intracranial bleed

*Placebo or no aspirin treatment.

†Although the rates for the 2 groups look a little different, the differences were not statistically significant. This means that the differences could simply be due to chance rather than due to the different treatments.

‡Includes sudden cardiac death and death because of heart attacks, strokes, and other heart diseases.

§Bleeding inside the skull or brain.

 




Glossaire

Placebo
A harmless, inactive, and simulated treatment.
Randomized controlled trials
Studies where people are assigned to one of the treatments purely by chance.
Systematic review
A comprehensive evaluation of the available research evidence on a particular topic.
Vascular
The body's network of blood vessels. It includes the arteries, veins, and capillaries that carry blood to and from the heart.

Ressources Web connexes

  • Le dépistage du risque de coronaropathie

    Health Link B.C.
    Les hommes de plus de 40 ans et les femmes post-ménopausées ou âgées de plus de 50 ans devraient passer un dépistage de la coronaropathie tous les 1 à 3 ans. Votre risque est plus élevé si vous êtes atteints de diabète, d'hypertension artérielle, d'obésité abdominale, de maladies rénales, ou encore si vous avez des antécédents familiaux de coronaropathie ou si vous fumez. Cette ressource est disponible en anglais.
  • Taux de cholestérol élevé: est-ce que réduire la quantité de gras dans votre alimentation peut vous aider?

    Informed Health Online
    Mangez moins de gras saturés pour vous aider à prévenir des maladies du coeur. Mangez moins de viande, de beurre, de fromage et de crème pour améliorer votre santé à long terme. Cette ressource est disponible en anglais.
  • Statines: devrais-je en prendre pour prévenir une crise cardiaque ou un AVC?

    OHRI
    Cet outil d'aide à la décision vise à aider les personnes qui envisagent de prendre ou non des médicaments appelés des "statines" afin de réduire leur risque de crise cardiaque et d'AVC. L'outil compare les avantages, les risques et les effets secondaires des deux options. L'outil comprend également des options de traitement alternatives à la prise de statines telles que tenter de réduire les risques avec des changements dans les habitudes de vie. Cette ressource est disponible en anglais.
AVERTISSEMENT Ces résumés sont fournis à titre informatif seulement. Ils ne peuvent pas remplacer les conseils de votre propre professionnel de la santé. Les résumés peuvent être reproduits à des fins éducatives sans but lucratif. Toute autre utilisation doit être approuvée par le Portail du vieillissement optimal de McMaster (info@mcmasteroptimalaging.org).

Voulez-vous savoir ce que lisent les professionnels? Inscrivez-vous pour accéder gratuitement à tous les contenus professionnels.

S'inscrire