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Is arachidonic acid stimulation really a test for the response to aspirin? Time to think again?

Is arachidonic acid stimulation really a test for the response to aspirin? Time to think again?
Is arachidonic acid stimulation really a test for the response to aspirin? Time to think again?
Introduction: Platelets play a key role in pathogenesis of atherothrombosis. Activated platelets initiate thrombus formation. Antiplatelet therapy (APT) modifies these properties. APT involves aspirin. The existence of ‘aspirin resistance’ is reported in many populations with cardiovascular disease. The prevalence of this phenomenon is highly variable, affecting more than 50% of patient subgroups in some papers.

Areas covered: This review describes the prevalence of ‘aspirin resistance’, analyses why there is so much apparent variation and addresses whether the commonly used tests of aspirin response are in fact accurately assessing its functional performance. The clinical consequences if arachidonic acid(AA)-mediated assays do not accurately assess the functional performance of aspirin could be important.

Expert commentary: Two important issues arise, firstly, that it can no longer be considered robust to use AA-induced platelet activation as a true diagnostic test of functional response to aspirin. It is clear that the output from PFT using AA as an agonist are not even a surrogate for the pharmacological activity of aspirin. Secondly, current data raise important and clinically relevant questions about, how AA stimulation induces clotting in individuals in whom aspirin is effective at its COX-1 target. The evidence indicates at least one recruitable, COX-1-independent pathway that is associated with vascular inflammation.
1477-9072
35-46
Olechowski, Bartosz
b025b40b-f9fa-4b8e-8f57-310d47e57700
Ashby, Alexander
f403fd28-7991-4d70-96c5-9dccdf339e32
Mariathas, Mark
6c658568-a1eb-4e39-b491-ee5a8ebd725a
Khanna, Vikram
17b557ad-b071-4d1a-84dd-3ba58470cee0
Mahmoudi, Michael
f6a55246-399e-4f81-944e-a4b169786e8a
Curzen, Nicholas
70f3ea49-51b1-418f-8e56-8210aef1abf4
Olechowski, Bartosz
b025b40b-f9fa-4b8e-8f57-310d47e57700
Ashby, Alexander
f403fd28-7991-4d70-96c5-9dccdf339e32
Mariathas, Mark
6c658568-a1eb-4e39-b491-ee5a8ebd725a
Khanna, Vikram
17b557ad-b071-4d1a-84dd-3ba58470cee0
Mahmoudi, Michael
f6a55246-399e-4f81-944e-a4b169786e8a
Curzen, Nicholas
70f3ea49-51b1-418f-8e56-8210aef1abf4

Olechowski, Bartosz, Ashby, Alexander, Mariathas, Mark, Khanna, Vikram, Mahmoudi, Michael and Curzen, Nicholas (2017) Is arachidonic acid stimulation really a test for the response to aspirin? Time to think again? Expert Review of Cardiovascular Therapy, 15 (1), 35-46. (doi:10.1080/14779072.2017.1266255).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Introduction: Platelets play a key role in pathogenesis of atherothrombosis. Activated platelets initiate thrombus formation. Antiplatelet therapy (APT) modifies these properties. APT involves aspirin. The existence of ‘aspirin resistance’ is reported in many populations with cardiovascular disease. The prevalence of this phenomenon is highly variable, affecting more than 50% of patient subgroups in some papers.

Areas covered: This review describes the prevalence of ‘aspirin resistance’, analyses why there is so much apparent variation and addresses whether the commonly used tests of aspirin response are in fact accurately assessing its functional performance. The clinical consequences if arachidonic acid(AA)-mediated assays do not accurately assess the functional performance of aspirin could be important.

Expert commentary: Two important issues arise, firstly, that it can no longer be considered robust to use AA-induced platelet activation as a true diagnostic test of functional response to aspirin. It is clear that the output from PFT using AA as an agonist are not even a surrogate for the pharmacological activity of aspirin. Secondly, current data raise important and clinically relevant questions about, how AA stimulation induces clotting in individuals in whom aspirin is effective at its COX-1 target. The evidence indicates at least one recruitable, COX-1-independent pathway that is associated with vascular inflammation.

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Accepted/In Press date: 25 November 2016
e-pub ahead of print date: 10 December 2016
Published date: 2017

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 413698
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/413698
ISSN: 1477-9072
PURE UUID: 2dfbb883-ba0e-4419-9c8f-75e5fa4046e1
ORCID for Michael Mahmoudi: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-1293-8461
ORCID for Nicholas Curzen: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-9651-7829

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Date deposited: 31 Aug 2017 16:31
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 04:24

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Contributors

Author: Bartosz Olechowski
Author: Alexander Ashby
Author: Mark Mariathas
Author: Vikram Khanna
Author: Nicholas Curzen ORCID iD

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