1. Meloxicam Does Not Affect the Antiplatelet Effect of Aspirin in Healthy Male and Female Volunteers.
- Author
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Joanne van Ryn, Monika Kink-Eiband, Ingrid Kuritsch, Ulrich Feifel, Gertraud Hanft, Gudrun Wallenstein, Guenter Trummlitz, and Michel Pairet
- Subjects
CYCLOOXYGENASE 2 inhibitors ,ASPIRIN ,ANALGESICS ,ENZYMES - Abstract
This study determined if meloxicam, a selective cyclooxygenase (COX)-2 inhibitor, interferes with the antiplatelet effect of aspirin using platelet aggregation and thromboxane (Tx) B
2 endpoints in healthy volunteers. Eight male and 8 female volunteers participated in this open-label, randomized, two-treatment, two-way crossover trial. Treatment 1 was meloxicam (15 mg qd) over 4 days, and then aspirin (100 mg qd) was ingested 2 hours after meloxicam for an additional 7 days. Blood samples were taken 2, 6, and 24 hours after the last dose. Treatment 2 consisted of only aspirin (100 mg) over 2 days. Samples were taken at the same time points. Each subject received both treatments with a 2-week washout between the treatment periods. Treatments were safe and well tolerated. The initial 4-day treatment with meloxicam had no effect on platelet aggregation but reduced serum TxB2 by 64% ± 19%. Addition of aspirin (100 mg qd) for 7 days resulted in complete inhibition of aggregation and TxB2 for 24 hours. Two-day treatment with only 100 mg aspirin also resulted in complete inhibition of platelet aggregation and TxB2 . These results indicate that meloxicam does not affect the ability of aspirin to inhibit COX-1 in platelets, thereby allowing aspirin to effectively prevent platelet aggregation and reduce TxB2 levels, and that meloxicam is selective for COX-2. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2004