Scientific News Health care Other illnesses and advices IBUPROFEN DESTROYS ASPIRIN'S POSITIVE EFFECT ON STROKE RISK
IBUPROFEN DESTROYS ASPIRIN'S POSITIVE EFFECT ON STROKE RISK
Stroke patients who use ibuprofen for arthritis
pain or other conditions while taking aspirin to reduce the risk of a second
stroke undermine aspirin’s ability to act as an anti-platelet agent,
researchers at the University at Buffalo have shown.
In a cohort of patients seen by physicians at two
offices of the Dent Neurologic Institute, 28 patients were identified as taking
both aspirin and ibuprofen (a nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug, or NSAID)
daily and all were found to have no anti-platelet effect from their daily
aspirin.
Thirteen of these patients were being seen
because they had a second stroke/TIA while taking aspirin and a NSAID, and were
platelet non-responsive to aspirin (aspirin resistant) at the time of that
stroke.
The researchers found that when 18 of the 28
patients returned for a second neurological visit after discontinuing NSAID use
and were tested again, all had regained their aspirin sensitivity and its
ability to prevent blood platelets from aggregating and blocking arteries.
The study is the first to show the clinical
consequences of the aspirin/NSAID interaction in patients being treated for
prevention of a second stroke, and presents a possible explanation of the
mechanism of action.
The Food and Drug Administration currently warns
that ibuprofen might make aspirin less effective, but states that the clinical
implications of the interaction have not been evaluated.
“This interaction between aspirin and ibuprofen
or prescription NSAID’s is one of the best-known, but well-kept secrets in
stroke medicine,” said Francis M. Gengo, Pharm.D., lead researcher on the
study.
“It’s unfortunate that clinicians and
patients often are unaware of this interaction. Whatever number of patients who
have had strokes because of the interaction between aspirin and NSAIDs, those
strokes were preventable.”
Gengo is professor of neurology in the UB School
of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences and professor of pharmacy practice in the UB
School of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences. Results of the study were
published in the January issue of the Journal of Clinical Pharmacology.
“We first looked at this issue way back in 1992
in a study conducted in normal volunteers, but it was published as an abstract
only,” he said. “We never followed through with a manuscript, but another
group published an elegant study in the New England Journal of Medicine showing
this interaction at least seven years ago.
“When we began to assess this in our stroke
patients, a surprisingly high percentage of a group of 653 patients, around 17
percent, were taking aspirin plus Motrin [a brand of ibuprofen].
“The prescription medication Aggrenox, which
also is used for secondary stroke prevention and contains aspirin and extended
release dipyridamole, is affected the same way as aspirin,” Gengo continued.
“In preventing strokes, it is statistically a little better than aspirin but
more expensive.
“However, one of the most common side effects
when you first start taking Aggrenox is headache, so some physicians,
pharmacists or physician assistants tell patients to take a Motrin so they
don’t get a headache. This likely would negate the effects of the aspirin and
extended release dipyridamole. Those patients might as well take this expensive
drug and flush it down the toilet.”
Gengo and colleagues verified with urine testing
that all 18 patients, six men and 12 women, were taking their aspirin or aspirin
and extended release dipyridamole as directed. Information on the concomitant
use of NSAIDS was obtained from patient interviews. Data from the earlier
healthy volunteer study showed the magnitude and time course of each drug
administered separately, as well as in combination.
The UB study provides important information,
Gengo noted, because in most previous studies, measurements were taken only at
one point in time, and that time point may have been during the 4-6 hour window
when concentrations of NSAIDS were sufficiently high to inhibit aggregation.
“Our data report the entire time course of this
interaction,” he said. “The results showed that platelets resumed
aggregating within 4-6 hours when aspirin and ibuprofen were taken close
together, leaving patients with no anti-platelet effect for 18-20 hours a day.
Normally, a single dose of aspirin has an effect on platelet aggregation for
72-96 hours,” Gengo said.
“When I lecture to pharmacy students, I tell
them ‘Please, you have a responsibility to the patients you care for. When you
counsel a patient taking aspirin/extended release dipyrdamole to lower stroke
risk, tell patients they may have some transient headaches, but to avoid
ibuprofen. You may have prevented that patient from having another stroke.’”
###
Contact: Lois Baker
ljbaker@buffalo.edu
716-645-5000 x1417
University at Buffalo
Publishing date: March 19, 2008
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