Background: Low-dose aspirin is a risk factor for peptic ulcer disease but previous, population-based cohort studies may have underestimated the low-dose aspirin risk because they did not use a new-user design. Gastrointestinal bleeding occurs more frequently early after initiation of low-dose aspirin therapy than in later years. Aim: To assess the associations of low-dose aspirin with gastric and duodenal ulcer incidence in prevalent- and new-user design. Methods: Multivariate Cox regression models in the German ESTHER study (N = 7737) and the UK Biobank (N = 213,598) with more than 10 years of follow-up. Results: In the prevalent-user design, there was no significant association between low-dose aspirin and gastric ulcer observed in both cohorts. Furthermore, low-dose aspirin was weakly, statistically significantly associated with prevalent duodenal ulcer in the UK Biobank (hazard ratio [95% confidence interval]: 1.27 [1.07–1.51]) but not in the ESTHER study (1.33 [0.54–3.29]). When restricting the exposure to only new users, the hazard ratios for incident gastric and duodenal ulcer disease were 1.82 [1.58–2.11] and 1.66 [1.36–2.04] in the UK Biobank, respectively, and 2.83 [1.40–5.71] and 3.89 [1.46–10.42] in the ESTHER study, respectively. Conclusions: This study shows that low-dose aspirin is an independent risk factor for both gastric and duodenal ulcers. The associations were not significant or weak in the prevalent-user design and strong and statistically significant in the new-user design in both cohorts. Thus, it is important to weigh risks against benefits when low-dose aspirin treatment shall be initiated and to monitor adverse gastrointestinal symptoms after the start of low-dose aspirin therapy.
CITATION STYLE
Nguyen, T. N. M., Sha, S., Chen, L. J., Holleczek, B., Brenner, H., & Schöttker, B. (2022). Strongly increased risk of gastric and duodenal ulcers among new users of low-dose aspirin: results from two large cohorts with new-user design. Alimentary Pharmacology and Therapeutics, 56(2), 251–262. https://doi.org/10.1111/apt.17050
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