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PWE-124 Daily aspirin 300mg: how much do patients take? drug accountability for the first 5 years of the aspect study

Authors :
Sharon Love
David Johnston
Pradeep Bhandari
G Reilly
Krish Ragunath
H Barr
Kishor Vaidya
Ian D. Penman
Janusz Jankowski
Michael Gibbons
Danielle Morris
Yeng Ang
Cathryn Edwards
James Neale
Stephen Attwood
Colin Rodgers
Rebecca Harrison
Peter Watson
J S de Caestecker
Scott Sanders
Paul Moayyedi
Nicholas I. Church
Adelyn Wise
Source :
Oesophagus.
Publication Year :
2017
Publisher :
BMJ Publishing Group Ltd and British Society of Gastroenterology, 2017.

Abstract

Introduction We prescribe medicines to patients but the key factor determining efficacy is the dose taken. Recent evidence suggests compliance with aspirin therapy is vital to ensuring its chemoprevention efficacy. Therefore we look at the patient’s compliance with aspirin in a large trial. Method In the 2 × 2 factorial AspECT study, Barrett’s patients were randomised to take 300 mg Aspirin daily or no aspirin and to take 20 mg or 80 mg of PPI. This paper describes for the first 5 years after randomisation the aspirin taking pattern of those prescribed aspirin. Logistic regression analysis was used to consider what factors affected compliance. Results Of the 1116 patients randomised to aspirin, 803 (72%; 95% CI 69.2, 74.5) took aspirin for 5 years or until discontinuation related to the trial. Of the 803, 514 took aspirin at a dose of 300 mg and 77 took a lower dose for 5 years without interruption (150 mg (38), 75 mg (24), 150 mg later reducing to 75 mg (15)). The remaining 212/803 had interruptions as permitted in the protocol or discontinued due to trial related reasons (e.g. trial endpoints or protocol deviations). There was no evidence to suggest that gender, dose of PPI, age, ethnicity or length of Barrett’s predicted 5 year compliance. Conclusion Conclusion: In AspECT, 72% of patients were compliant with aspirin for 5 years or until discontinuation related to the trial. We did not discover any features predicting compliance. However since all patients were randomised to PPI, it does indicate longer term aspirin chemoprevention may be limited in over a quarter of the reflux population. Our thanks to the patients and the sites. The trial is sponsored by the University of Oxford with grant funding from CR-UK (A4584) and support from the Investigator-Sponsored Study Program of AstraZeneca Trial management and statistics provided by OCTO (OCTRU) and CSM Disclosure of Interest None Declared

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Oesophagus
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........2fed4e763cf8a3a8047b8e5a4dea6d87
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1136/gutjnl-2017-314472.369