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Published in: Journal of Translational Medicine 1/2008

Open Access 01-12-2008 | Research

Non-compliance is the predominant cause of aspirin resistance in chronic coronary arterial disease patients

Authors: Kenneth A Schwartz, Dianne E Schwartz, Kimberly Barber, Mathew Reeves, Anthony C De Franco

Published in: Journal of Translational Medicine | Issue 1/2008

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Abstract

Background

Our previous publication showed that 9% of patients with a history of myocardial infarction MI. could be labeled as aspirin resistant; all of these patients were aspirin resistant because of non-compliance. This report compares the relative frequency of aspirin resistance between known compliant and non-compliance subjects to demonstrate that non-compliance is the predominant cause of aspirin resistance.

Methods

The difference in the slopes of the platelet prostaglandin agonist (PPA) light aggregation curves off aspirin and 2 hours after observed aspirin ingestion was defined as net aspirin inhibition.

Results

After supposedly refraining from aspirin for 7 days, 46 subjects were judged non-compliant with the protocol. Of the remaining 184 compliant subjects 39 were normals and 145 had a past history of MI. In known compliant subjects there was no difference in net aspirin inhibition between normal and MI subjects. Net aspirin inhibition in known compliant patients was statistically normally distributed. Only 3% of compliant subjects (2 normals and 5 MI) had a net aspirin inhibitory response of less than one standard deviation which could qualify as a conservative designation of aspirin resistance. A maximum of 35% of the 191 post MI subjects could be classified as aspirin resistant and/or non-compliant: 9% aspirin resistant because of non-compliance, 23% non-compliant with the protocol and possibly 3% because of a decreased net aspirin inhibitory response in known compliant patients.

Conclusion

Our data supports the thesis that the predominant cause of aspirin resistance is noncompliance.
Appendix
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Metadata
Title
Non-compliance is the predominant cause of aspirin resistance in chronic coronary arterial disease patients
Authors
Kenneth A Schwartz
Dianne E Schwartz
Kimberly Barber
Mathew Reeves
Anthony C De Franco
Publication date
01-12-2008
Publisher
BioMed Central
Published in
Journal of Translational Medicine / Issue 1/2008
Electronic ISSN: 1479-5876
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/1479-5876-6-46

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