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Aspirin - resistance? A few critical considerations on definition, terminology, diagnosis, clinical value, natural course of atherosclerotic disease, and therapeutic consequences

Journal

VASA-EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF VASCULAR MEDICINE
Volume 40, Issue 6, Pages 429-438

Publisher

VERLAG HANS HUBER HOGREFE AG
DOI: 10.1024/0301-1526/a000145

Keywords

Aspirin resistance; platelet function; inflammation; point of care testing

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Based upon various platelet function tests and the fact that patients experience vascular events despite taking acetylsalicylic acid (ASA or aspirin), it has been suggested that patients may become resistant to the action of this pharmacological compound. However, the term aspirin resistance was created almost two decades ago but is still not defined. Platelet function tests are not standardized, providing conflicting information and cut-off values are arbitrarily set. Intertest comparison reveals low agreement. Even point of care tests have been introduced before appropriate validation. Inflammation may activate platelets, co-medication(s) may interfere significantly with aspirin action on platelets. Platelet function and Cox-inhibition are only some of the effects of aspirin on haemostatic regulation. One single test is not reliable to identify an altered response. Therefore, it may be more appropriate to speak about treatment failure to aspirin therapy than using the term aspirin resistance. There is no evidence based justification from either the laboratory or the clinical point of view for platelet function testing in patients taking aspirin as well as from an economic standpoint. Until evidence based data from controlled studies will be available the term aspirin resistance should not be further used. A more robust monitoring of factors resulting in cardiovascular events such as inflammation is recommended.

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