Aspirin: 4,000 years and still learning
LEARNING WHEN NOT TO USE ASPIRIN
The perioperative period is a dangerous time—surgical stress, hypercoagulability, inflammation, pain, and hemodynamic changes predispose to plaque rupture and supply-demand imbalance. It is therefore logical to hope aspirin would provide protection for at-risk patients in this context.
Unfortunately, results from the second Perioperative Ischemic Evaluation trial have dampened enthusiasm.11 Aspirin has now joined clonidine and beta-blockers on the list of interventions that probably do not reduce perioperative cardiovascular mortality rates. Other than protecting against stent thrombosis, aspirin’s main perioperative effect is to increase bleeding. Consequently, some surgical procedures mandate withdrawal of aspirin.
WHAT WE STILL NEED TO LEARN
Over the years, we have learned the broad outlines of using aspirin to prevent and treat cardiovascular disease, to relieve pain and inflammation (its original purpose), and to prevent stent thrombosis.
However, many details remain to be filled in. We need to better define groups who should and should not take aspirin for primary prevention. We also need to understand aspirin’s role in cancer chemoprevention, to find better ways to mitigate its undesirable effects, and to study its role in treating myocardial injury after noncardiac surgery.
Finally, we need to determine which (if any) patients without coronary stents will benefit from continuing their aspirin perioperatively or even initiating aspirin therapy preoperatively.
Will humanity still be using salicylates 4,000 years from now? Probably not. But what we have learned and will continue to learn from this remarkable group of medications will certainly inform new and better therapies in the years to come.