An analysis of previous studies indicates that use of aspirin significantly reduces the risk of cardiovascular events in women and in men, due to reducing the risk of stroke in women and reducing the risk of heart attack in men, according to a study in the January 18 issue of JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association.
Although the benefits of aspirin therapy for reducing the risk of heart attack (myocardial infarction – MI), stroke, and vascular death among men and women with preexisting cardiovascular disease are well established, the role of aspirin in primary prevention is less clear, according to background information in the article. And it has not been clear if there is a differential beneficial effect between men and women.
Jeffrey S. Berger, M.D., M.S., of Duke University, Durham, N.C., and colleagues performed a sex-specific meta-analysis of aspirin therapy for the primary prevention of cardiovascular events to better understand the association of sex with the response to aspirin. The researchers performed a search of databases to identify randomized controlled trials of aspirin therapy in participants without cardiovascular disease that reported data on heart attack, stroke, and cardiovascular death. Six trials with a total of 95,456 individuals were identified; 3 trials included only men, 1 included only women, and 2 included both sexes. The authors examined a combined endpoint of any major cardiovascular event (cardiovascular death, nonfatal heart attack, or nonfatal stroke), and each of these individual components separately.
The researchers found that among the 51,342 women, there were 625 strokes, 469 heart attacks, and 364 cardiovascular deaths. Aspirin therapy was associated with a significant 12 percent reduction in cardiovascular events and a 17 percent reduction in stroke, which was a reflection of a 24 percent reduced rate of ischemic stroke. There was no significant effect on heart attacks or cardiovascular death.