Tackling heart disease: the Scottish aspirin trial

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Catégorie Primary study
Registry of TrialsISRCTN registry
Year 2002

This article is not included in any systematic review

This article is part of the following publication threads:
  • AAA [Aspirin for Asymptomatic Atherosclerosis] (4 documents)
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Primary prevention strategies aimed at modifying cardiovascular risk factors in otherwise healthy individuals have proved of only limited benefit in the primary prevention of cardiovascular disease. It is possible to identify in the general population large numbers of subjects with asymptomatic preclinical atherosclerosis who are at high risk of subsequent cardiovascular events using a simple blood pressure measurement - the Ankle Brachial Pressure Index (ABPI). We are currently conducting the first prevention trial on such high-risk subjects to determine whether low dose aspirin can reduce the incidence of cardiovascular events and death. 3,350 subjects aged over 50 years with an ABPI of at least 0.95 but no history of cardiovascular disease have been randomised into this double-blind placebo-controlled trial.. The principal hypothesis is that treatment of subjects with asymptomatic atherosclerosis, using low-dose aspirin, prevents subsequent cardiovascular disease indicated by incidence of major cardiovascular and cerebrovascular events.. An additional endpoint was added to this trial shortly after funding was obtained for the original AAA trial. As this additional endpoint has little to do with cardiovascular disease, funding was sought, and gained, from the Wellcome Trust. This end point was known as the 'Randomised controlled trial of aspirin in the reduction of age associated cognitive decline', and any information relating only to this endpoint will be headed with the title: 'Cognitive decline endpoint'. The aim of this endpoint is to determine whether low dose aspirin treatment over a five-year period reduces cognitive decline in subjects at high risk of cardiovascular disease.
Epistemonikos ID: de6c2d7451d5e6b5ff0e2faf457ee3542766e206
First added on: Aug 26, 2015