Dr Jekyll famously noted that all men are ‘comingled with good and evil’. So too, are most medical interventions. Acetylsalicylic acid (ASA) has a proven benefit in the treatment of myocardial infarction, and for primary and secondary cardiovascular prophylaxis. It may even prevent cancer. However, ASA is equally infamous for its ability to injure the gastrointestinal tract, causing complicated peptic ulcer disease. As evidence of their cardiovascular benefit continues to accrue, anticoagulant and antiplatelet therapies will be prescribed more often and therapeutic endoscopists will be kept busy. Gastroenterologists who manage the complications of ASA-associated gastropathy are understandably keen to prevent its recurrence and often recommend that ASA be either held or withdrawn. While it is intuitively sensible that avoiding ASA will minimize the risk of rebleeding, this may not be of net clinical benefit when all the consequences of that decision are considered. In the present issue of The Canadian Journal of Gastroenterology, Cheung et al (pages 619–623) (1) retrospectively reviewed data from 102 patients admitted to hospital with acute myocardial infarction who then developed a bleeding peptic ulcer. All patients received proton pump inhibitors (PPIs) and almost all with high-risk ulcer stigmata received endoscopic therapy. In most cases (63%), ASA was discontinued. Individuals who were continued on ASA were less likely to have high-risk ulcer stigmata on endoscopy and more likely to have required coronary intervention. Patients continuing versus stopping ASA did not differ significantly in 30-day rebleeding rates, mortality or length of stay. This small study profiled clinical behaviour at two tertiary care centres and, as such, may not be generalizable to other practice settings. Reassuringly, it demonstrates that clinicians made rational decisions to selectively continue ASA in patients with low gastrointestinal risk and high cardiovascular risk. More importantly, however, it shines light on a common but high-stakes clinical scenario, and poses two fundamental questions about the clinical consequences of stopping or continuing ASA. First, does continuing ASA impair ulcer healing or increase the risk of rebleeding? All patients recovering from an acute ulcer bleed should receive a PPI. Randomized trials have demonstrated that combining low-dose ASA with a PPI reduces the risk of ulcer complications versus either clopidogrel mono-therapy (2,3) or ASA monotherapy (4), following an ASA-induced peptic ulcer bleed. Another trial (5), which enrolled only low-risk patients, showed the rate of endoscopic injury to be low in subjects given either low-dose ASA or clopidogrel who received a PPI after recovering from ASA-induced peptic ulcer disease. However, these landmark trials all fall short of answering our question for two reasons: All were conducted in Asian populations (in which PPIs are considered to be more effective); and Each protocol called for ASA to be stopped and reintroduced only after the index ulcer had healed. There are abundant data to suggest that PPI therapy can heal ulcers in patients who continue to receive conventional nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, but healing is not universal and such a strategy has not been tested rigorously in high-risk patients receiving ASA. A second question is whether stopping ASA leads to adverse cardiovascular outcomes. Sung et al (6) unequivocally demonstrated this in a small randomized trial among patients treated for ASA-associated peptic ulcer bleeding. Stopping ASA therapy did not reduce rebleeding, but was associated with a clinically significant increase in overall mortality. This concept was reinforced by a large meta-analysis (7) that associated ASA withdrawal (for any reason) with an increased risk of major adverse coronary events, particularly among patients with intracoronary stents. When an ulcer begins to bleed after a myocardial infarction, there may well be an optimal interval for which ASA can be withdrawn to facilitate healing without compromising cardiovascular outcomes; this, however, remains to be defined. Ultimately, these questions will only be answered with adequately powered and well-controlled clinical trials. Until such data are available, clinicians must continue to weigh the pros and cons of alternative approaches, and individualize risk assessments. Perhaps the greatest lesson is that neither gastrointestinal nor cardiovascular risk should be considered in isolation. When charmed by Dr Jekyll, always stay mindful of Mr Hyde.
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