A
COMPARISON OF WARFARIN AND ASPIRIN FOR THE PREVENTION OF RECURRENT ISCHEMIC
STROKE.
Mohr
JP, et al. N Engl J Med 2001 Nov 15;345(20):1444-51.
BACKGROUND:
Despite the use of antiplatelet agents, usually aspirin, in patients who have
had an ischemic stroke, there is still a substantial rate of recurrence.
Therefore, we investigated whether warfarin, which is effective and superior to
aspirin in the prevention of cardiogenic embolism, would also prove superior in
the prevention of recurrent ischemic stroke in patients with a prior
noncardioembolic ischemic stroke.
METHODS:
In a multicenter, double-blind, randomized trial, we compared the effect of
warfarin (at a dose adjusted to produce an international normalized ratio of
1.4 to 2.8) and that of aspirin (325 mg per day) on the combined primary end
point of recurrent ischemic stroke or death from any cause within two years.
RESULTS:
The two randomized study groups were similar with respect to base-line risk
factors. In the intention-to-treat analysis, no significant differences were
found between the treatment groups in any of the outcomes measured. The primary
end point of death or recurrent ischemic stroke was reached by 196 of 1103
patients assigned to warfarin (17.8 percent) and 176 of 1103 assigned to
aspirin (16.0 percent; P=0.25; hazard ratio comparing warfarin with aspirin,
1.13; 95 percent confidence interval, 0.92 to 1.38). The rates of major
hemorrhage were low (2.22 per 100 patient-years in the warfarin group and 1.49
per 100 patient-years in the aspirin group). Also, there were no significant
treatment-related differences in the frequency of or time to the primary end
point or major hemorrhage according to the cause of the initial stroke (1237
patients had had previous small-vessel or lacunar infarcts, 576 had had
cryptogenic infarcts, and 259 had had infarcts designated as due to severe
stenosis or occlusion of a large artery).
CONCLUSIONS:
Over two years, we found no difference between aspirin and warfarin in the
prevention of recurrent ischemic stroke or death or in the rate of major
hemorrhage. Consequently, we regard both warfarin and aspirin as reasonable
therapeutic alternatives.