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Decreased turnover aspirin resistance by bidaily aspirin intake and efficient cytoreduction in myeloproliferative neoplasms

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journal contribution
posted on 2017-11-01, 12:04 authored by Andréas Perrier-Cornet, Jean-Christophe Ianotto, Fanny Mingant, Maëla Perrot, Eric Lippert, Hubert Galinat

Essential thrombocythemia (ET) and polycythemia vera (PV) are myeloproliferative neoplasms (MPN) with an increased risk of arterial and venous thrombosis. Aspirin is recommended to reduce this risk, but resistance to antiplatelet therapy seems to hamper its efficacy in some patients. We have previously shown that multiple electrode aggregometry (MEA) was a valuable tool to assess aspirin resistance in MPN. In this study, MEA was used to assess the reduction in aspirin resistance after bi-daily (BID) aspirin intake or cytoreduction.

Fifty one MPN patients (31 ET and 20 PV) receiving 75 mg aspirin once daily (OD) or BID, with or without cytoreductive treatment, were analyzed. Aspirin resistance was assessed using whole blood MEA (Multiplate®, Roche Diagnostics, Meylan, France).

In all patients, global aspirin resistance consisted mainly of turnover resistance (TOR). 94% of patients with OD aspirin intake and without cytoreduction displayed biological aspirin resistance. By switching to a BID aspirin regimen, the proportion of resistant patients reduced to 47%. Cytoreduction also contributed to reduce aspirin resistance in a similar way (50% of aspirin resistant patients). Combining cytoreduction and BID aspirin regimen was the most efficient way to reduce aspirin resistance yielding to 12% resistant patients. Moreover, a nonlinear correlation was observed between TOR and naive platelet counts regardless of aspirin regimen. Last, mutational status did not seem to affect TOR.

This study confirmed that BID aspirin is biologically more effective than OD aspirin in reduction of aspirin resistance. The latter was achieved through a reduction in TOR which was also decreased by cytoreductive therapy.

Funding

This study received technical support from CHU de Brest (France).

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