Baseline Characteristics of Participants in the ASPREE (ASPirin in Reducing Events in the Elderly) Study.
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2017
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Abstract
There are no primary prevention trials of aspirin with relevant geriatric outcomes in elderly people. ASPirin in Reducing Events in the Elderly (ASPREE) is a placebo-controlled trial of low-dose aspirin that will determine whether 5 years of daily 100-mg enteric-coated aspirin extends disability-free and dementia-free life in a healthy elderly population and whether these benefits outweigh the risks.Set in primary care, this randomized double-blind placebo-controlled trial has a composite primary endpoint of death, incident dementia or persistent physical disability. Participants aged 70+ years (non-minorities) or 65+ years (U.S. minorities) were free of cardiovascular disease, dementia, or physical disability and without a contraindication to, or indication for, aspirin. Baseline data include physical and lifestyle, personal and family medical history, hemoglobin, fasting glucose, creatinine, lipid panel, urinary albumin:creatinine ratio, cognition (3MS, HVLT-R, COWAT, SDMT), mood (CES-D-10), physical function (gait speed, grip strength), Katz activities of daily living and quality of life (SF-12).Recruitment ended in December 2014 with 16,703 Australian and 2,411 U.S. participants, a median age of 74 (range 65-98) years and 56% women. Approximately 55% of the U.S. cohort were from minority groups; 9% of the total cohort. Proportions with hypertension, overweight, and chronic kidney disease were similar to age-matched populations from both countries although lower percentages had diabetes, dyslipidemia, and osteoarthritis.Findings from ASPREE will be generalizable to a healthier older population in both countries and will assess whether the broad benefits of daily low-dose aspirin in prolonging independent life outweigh the risks.Reference Key |
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Authors | McNeil, John J;Woods, Robyn L;Nelson, Mark R;Murray, Anne M;Reid, Christopher M;Kirpach, Brenda;Storey, Elsdon;Shah, Raj C;Wolfe, Rory S;Tonkin, Andrew M;Newman, Anne B;Williamson, Jeff D;Lockery, Jessica E;Margolis, Karen L;Ernst, Michael E;Abhayaratna, Walter P;Stocks, Nigel;Fitzgerald, Sharyn M;Trevaks, Ruth E;Orchard, Suzanne G;Beilin, Lawrence J;Donnan, Geoffrey A;Gibbs, Peter;Johnston, Colin I;Grimm, Richard H;, ; |
Journal | the journals of gerontology series a, biological sciences and medical sciences |
Year | 2017 |
DOI | 10.1093/gerona/glw342 |
URL | |
Keywords | Keywords not found |
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