Enteric coating of aspirin significantly decreases gastroduodenal mucosal lesions
- 1 August 1999
- journal article
- clinical trial
- Published by Wiley in Alimentary Pharmacology & Therapeutics
- Vol. 13 (8) , 1109-1114
- https://doi.org/10.1046/j.1365-2036.1999.00588.x
Abstract
Low-dose aspirin (acetylsalicylic acid, ASA) increases the risk of developing peptic ulceration. To investigate the gastroduodenal mucosal tolerability of enteric-coated ASA (EC-ASA) 100 mg/day compared to either placebo (study 1) or plain ASA 100 mg/day (study 2) in healthy volunteers. Study 1: In this double-blind study 18 volunteers received randomized dosing with either EC-ASA 100 mg or placebo for 15 days. Study 2: 41 volunteers underwent randomized 7-day dosing of either EC-ASA 100 mg or plain ASA 100 mg in this double-blind, parallel-group, comparison study. In both studies acute gastroduodenal mucosal lesions were assessed endoscopically before treatment, on the morning of day 1 after the first dose (only in study 2), and on the morning after the last dose of the test medication. Study 1 did not reveal any significant differences between the lesion scores of EC-ASA and placebo. In contrast, in study 2 significantly higher total gastroduodenal mucosal lesion scores were observed on day 1 after the first dose and after 7 days of dosing with plain ASA (mean sum of the lesion scores in the gastric fundus, body, antrum and in the duodenal bulb: day 1: plain ASA 3.95+/-3.38 vs. EC-ASA 1.43+/-1.91, P = 0.03; day 7: plain ASA 6.35+/-4.10 vs. EC-ASA 2.00+/-2.02, P = 0.0004). Tolerance of the test drugs was good, and no other adverse events were observed. Enteric-coated aspirin 100 mg/day causes significantly less gastroduodenal damage over 7 days than the same dose of plain aspirin, when given to healthy subjects. There was little gastric injury and no significant differences between EC-ASA and placebo in this respect.Keywords
This publication has 30 references indexed in Scilit:
- Protection of human gastric mucosa against aspirin—enteric coating or dose reduction?Alimentary Pharmacology & Therapeutics, 1999
- Nonsteroidal Anti-Inflammatory Drugs: How Do They Damage Gastroduodenal Mucosa?Digestive Diseases, 1995
- ReviewClinical Neuropharmacology, 1993
- The Mechanisms of Aspirin-Induced Gastric Mucosal InjuryJournal of Clinical Gastroenterology, 1993
- Swedish Aspirin Low-dose Trial (SALT) of 75 mg aspirin as secondary prophylaxis after cerebrovascular ischaemic eventsThe Lancet, 1991
- United Kingdom transient ischaemic attack (UK-TIA) aspirin trial: interim resultsBMJ, 1988
- Randomised trial of prophylactic daily aspirin in British male doctorsBMJ, 1988
- NON-STEROIDAL ANTI-INFLAMMATORY DRUGS AND BLEEDING PEPTIC ULCERThe Lancet, 1986
- COMPARISON OF THE EFFECTS OF REGULAR AND ENTERIC-COATED ASPIRIN ON GASTRODUODENAL MUCOSA OF MANThe Lancet, 1980
- Endoscopic Evaluation of the Effects of Aspirin, Buffered Aspirin, and Enteric-Coated Aspirin on Gastric and Duodenal MucosaNew England Journal of Medicine, 1980