Daily low‐dose aspirin and blood pressure in community‐dwelling older adults

Author:

Ernst Michael E.12ORCID,Phan Kevin3,Nelson Mark R.34,Woods Robyn L.3,Fravel Michelle A.1,Beilin Lawrence5,Orchard Suzanne G.3,Zhou Zhen3,Polkinghorne Kevan R.367,Broder Jonathan C.3,Margolis Karen L.8,Reid Christopher M.39,Stocks Nigel10,Chowdhury Enayet311,Wolfe Rory3

Affiliation:

1. Department of Pharmacy Practice and Science College of Pharmacy, The University of Iowa Iowa City Iowa USA

2. Department of Family Medicine Carver College of Medicine, The University of Iowa Iowa City Iowa USA

3. School of Public Health and Preventive Medicine Monash University Melbourne Victoria Australia

4. Menzies Institute for Medical Research University of Tasmania Hobart Australia

5. Medical School Royal Perth Hospital University of Western Australia Perth Western Australia Australia

6. Department of Nephrology Monash Medical Centre, Monash Health Melbourne Victoria Australia

7. Department of Medicine Monash University Melbourne Victoria Australia

8. HealthPartners Institute Minneapolis Minnesota USA

9. School of Population Health Curtin University Perth Western Australia Australia

10. Discipline of General Practice, Adelaide Medical School The University of Adelaide Adelaide South Australia Australia

11. Advara HeartCare Melbourne Victoria Australia

Abstract

AbstractHigh‐quality randomized trial evidence is lacking on whether low‐dose aspirin exerts significant effects on blood pressure (BP) in older adults. The authors assessed longitudinal BP changes in participants enrolled in ASPirin in Reducing Events in the Elderly (ASPREE), a randomized, placebo‐controlled trial of 100 mg daily aspirin in 19 114 community‐dwelling Australian and U.S. adults without cardiovascular disease (CVD), dementia, or independence‐limiting physical disability. Participants’ BP was recorded at baseline and annual study visits, and managed by their usual care provider. BP trajectories for aspirin versus placebo during 4.7 years of follow‐up were examined for systolic and diastolic BP separately, using linear mixed models to account for between and within‐individual variability in BP. Analyses by subgroups were also explored with inclusion of interaction terms in the models. The difference in mean change in systolic BP between aspirin and placebo during study follow‐up was −0.03 mm Hg (95% confidence interval [CI]: −0.13, 0.07; p = .541) (aspirin minus placebo), while the mean difference for change in diastolic BP was −0.05 mm Hg (95% CI: –0.11, 0.01; p = .094). These small, non‐significant differences in BP change between the aspirin and placebo groups were consistent across baseline levels of BP and antihypertensive treatment status (treated/untreated). Likewise, subgroups of age, sex, chronic kidney disease, diabetes, and frailty revealed no interaction effect between the subgroup, aspirin treatment, and time. Interval‐censored Cox proportional hazards regression showed no difference in rates of incident treated hypertension between aspirin and placebo‐treated participants. The authors conclude that daily low‐dose aspirin does not significantly affect BP in older adults when managed by usual care.

Funder

National Health and Medical Research Council

Publisher

Wiley

Reference23 articles.

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