Islamabad,
Feb 9 : In the largest and longest head-to-head comparison of two
anti-clotting medications, warfarin and aspirin were similar in preventing
deaths and strokes in heart failure patients with normal heart rhythm, according
to late-breaking research presented at the American Stroke Association's
International Stroke Conference 2012.
"Although there was a warfarin
benefit for patients treated for four or more years, overall, warfarin and
aspirin were similar," said Shunichi Homma, M.D., lead author of the study and
the Margaret Milliken Hatch Professor of Medicine at Columbia University in New
York.
In the 11-country Warfarin versus Aspirin in Reduced Cardiac
Ejection Fraction (WARCEF) trial, researchers followed 2,305 patients with heart
failure and normal heart rhythm for up to six years (average 3.5 years). The
patients were on average 61 years old, and the power of the heart's main pumping
chamber, the left ventricle (left ventricular ejection fraction), was less than
35 percent (normal is 55 percent or higher).
Thirteen percent of the
patients experienced a stroke or transient ischemic attack and were at
heightened risk of recurrence. Patients with heart failure in general are at
increased risk of death, blood clots and strokes.
Researchers randomly
assigned patients to receive either 325 mg/day of aspirin or warfarin doses
calibrated to a pre-specified level of blood thinning. Warfarin therapy requires
frequent blood testing to monitor its dosage in order to achieve the desired
level of blood thinning. In order to avoid bias, all patients had blood drawn on
the same schedule and their pills adjusted so neither the patients nor their
treating physicians knew which regimen they were taking.
Death, ischemic
stroke (caused by blockage of an artery feeding the brain) or intracerebral
hemorrhage (bleeding inside the brain), which combined were the study's primary
endpoint, occurred at a rate of 7.47 percent for patients assigned to warfarin
and 7.93 percent for patients assigned to aspirin. The difference was not
statistically significant.
However, "in the group of patients followed
for more than three years, those on warfarin did better in comparison to the
aspirin patients," Homma said. Over the entire study period, patients receiving
warfarin were just over half as likely to develop a stroke, a component of
primary endpoint, as those taking aspirin. The rates of stroke were low with
annual rates of 0.72 percent in patients assigned to warfarin and 1.36 percent
for those on aspirin.
Researchers evaluated the safety of the
anti-clotting medications by monitoring major bleeding events other than
intracerebral hemorrhage (which was a component of the primary endpoint). Each
year, major bleeds occurred in 1.8 percent of patients on warfarin and 0.9
percent of those on aspirin -- a statistically significant
difference.
"As expected, the overall bleeding rate was higher with
warfarin," Homma said. "However, not all bleeds are equal, and the one that
patients fear the most -- bleeding within the brain (intracerebral hemorrhage)
occurred rarely in both groups." It occurred in 0.12 percent per year in the
warfarin group and 0.05 percent per year in the aspirin group.
"Given
that there is no overall difference between the two treatments and that possible
benefit of warfarin does not start until after 4 years of treatment, there is no
compelling reason to use warfarin, especially considering the bleeding risk,"
Homma said. The investigators are analyzing whether certain subgroups of
patients benefited more from each
treatment.
Ends
SA/EN
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» Warfarin and aspirin are similar in heart failure treatment
Warfarin and aspirin are similar in heart failure treatment
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