Overview

Multiple Daily Doses Of Aspirin To Overcome Aspirin Hyporesponsiveness Post Cardiac Bypass Surgery

Status:
Completed
Trial end date:
2013-08-01
Target enrollment:
0
Participant gender:
All
Summary
Cardiac bypass surgery is an important treatment for patients with severely blocked arteries (tubes that delivery oxygen and nutrients to the heart). Hundreds of thousands of these operations are done each year to help relieve patients' chest pain and to prevent future heart attacks. The surgery is done by "bypassing" blood flow around badly clogged arteries by sewing on healthy vessels from another part of the body (usually from the leg or the chest). Aspirin (a blood thinner) is given to patients once a day after their surgery because it stops "sticky" cells in the blood (platelets) from blocking these new vessels (which may lead to a future heart attack). Research has shown that aspirin does not work as well in people after they have bypass surgery as the investigators might expect (for reasons that are not fully understood). One reason aspirin may not work as well after surgery is because the body makes many more platelets after surgery than it would under normal circumstances. All of these new platelets overwhelm the aspirin and continue to be "sticky" and ready to block off arteries. The investigators believe that giving multiple daily doses of aspirin following bypass surgery is more effective than giving aspirin once daily at blocking platelet activity.
Phase:
Phase 2
Accepts Healthy Volunteers?
No
Details
Lead Sponsor:
Hamilton Health Sciences Corporation
Treatments:
Aspirin
Criteria
Inclusion Criteria:

- Adult subjects who undergo elective or urgent CABG surgery who are on or off aspirin
during the preoperative period

Exclusion Criteria:

- (a) initial platelet count <100,000 (b) significant liver disease (c) renal impairment
(CrCl<30 ml/min/1.73 m2) (d) receiving (or planned) clopidogrel therapy (e) receiving
NSAIDs or other drugs that might interfere with aspirin's platelet-inhibitory effect
(f) need for therapeutic doses of parenteral or oral anticoagulants after surgery and
(g) off-pump CABG (h) clinically important bleeding (chest tube drainage >200ml/hr for
6hrs)