A short-term effect of low-dose aspirin on major hemorrhagic risks in primary prevention: A case-crossover design

8Citations
Citations of this article
16Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

Abstract

Background: Very few studies have examined the risk of short-term adverse hemorrhage of low-dose aspirin use in primary prevention. This case-crossover study examined the transient effect of low-dose aspirin use on major hemorrhagic risks. Methods: A representative database of 1,000,000 patients randomly sampled from the Taiwan's National Health Insurance Research Database in 2000 was analyzed. The study cohort consisted of a total of 501,946 individuals, aged 30-95 years old, at risk of a major bleeding event in 2000. A case-crossover study was used to retrieve data on 10,905 incident patients with major hemorrhagic complications (3,781 cerebral and 7,124 gastrointestinal) and prescribed low-dose aspirin (≤300 mg/day) from 2000-2008. A 56-day time window (∼2 months) was used as the case period for which the odds ratio (OR) was estimated using the ratio of patients exposed during the 56-day case period only (1-56 days before the index date) compared to its corresponding 56-day control period only (57-112 days before the index date). Results: Four hundred eighty-nine (4.5%) of the 10,905 hemorrhagic patients had used low-dose aspirin during the 56-day case only period; 294 (2.7%) of the same patients had used low-dose aspirin during control only period. Low-dose aspirin use increase the risk of developing a major hemorrhage 1.33-fold (95% CI = 1.13-1.55, P<0.0001). Significance was found prominent in 4,453 non-hypertensive and non-diabetic subjects (Adjusted odds ratio = 1.88, 95% CI = 1.21-2.91). Conclusion: Transient low-dose aspirin use increases risk for major hemorrhagic events in Han Chinese. © 2014 Wu et al.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Wu, I. C., Lin, M. Y., Yu, F. J., Hsieh, H. M., Chiu, K. F., & Wu, M. T. (2014). A short-term effect of low-dose aspirin on major hemorrhagic risks in primary prevention: A case-crossover design. PLoS ONE, 9(5). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0098326

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free