Mianli Xiao, Zailing Xing, Douglas D Schocken, Janice C Zgibor, Amy C Alman
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Background: The effect of chronic aspirin use on the development of heart failure remains uncertain, and no prior observational study has evaluated it as a time-dependent exposure.
Methods: We analyzed data from four prospective cohort studies involving 26,941 individuals free of cardiovascular disease but at risk for heart failure. The baseline mean age was 60.7 years; 55.6% were female and 65.4% were White. Time-dependent information on aspirin use and heart failure risk factors was systematically collected, and participants were longitudinally followed for incident heart failure. Using the parametric g-formula, we estimated the effect of two hypothetical interventions-consistent aspirin use and never using aspirin-on heart failure incidence. Covariates included baseline age, sex, race, smoking, alcohol consumption, study-related factors, and time-dependent variables such as body mass index, systolic blood pressure, low-density lipids, triglycerides, blood glucose, creatinine, and medication use (anti-hypertensive, anti-diabetic, lipid-lowering, and anticoagulant).
Results: Over a median follow-up of 14.8 years (IQR: 8.5-22.5), 5,899 heart failure cases occurred. At year 32, as estimated by the model and compared with the natural course (no intervention), continuous aspirin use increased heart failure risk by 7% (risk ratio [RR] 1.07, 95% CI 1.05-1.08), while never using aspirin decreased risk by 6% (RR 0.94, 95% CI 0.92-0.95). These effects persisted in subgroup analyses by sex and by baseline age (<60/≥60 years).
Conclusion: Long-term aspirin use increased the risk of heart failure in individuals free of cardiovascular disease, as estimated through a hypothetical intervention using the g-formula.
期刊介绍:
The American Journal of Medicine - "The Green Journal" - publishes original clinical research of interest to physicians in internal medicine, both in academia and community-based practice. AJM is the official journal of the Alliance for Academic Internal Medicine, a prestigious group comprising internal medicine department chairs at more than 125 medical schools across the U.S. Each issue carries useful reviews as well as seminal articles of immediate interest to the practicing physician, including peer-reviewed, original scientific studies that have direct clinical significance and position papers on health care issues, medical education, and public policy.