Am J Respir Crit
Care Med. 2007 Jan 15;175(2):120-5.
Aspirin and
decreased adult-onset asthma: randomized comparisons from the
physicians' health study.
Barr RG, Kurth T, Stampfer MJ, Buring JE, Hennekens CH, Gaziano JM.
Division of General Medicine, Department of Medicine, Columbia
University Medical Center, New York, NY, USA.
RATIONALE: In an observational cohort study, women who
self-selected for frequent aspirin use developed less newly
diagnosed asthma than women who did not take aspirin.
OBJECTIVE: To
explore whether low-dose aspirin decreased the risk of newly
diagnosed asthma in a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled
trial.
METHODS: The
Physicians' Health Study randomized 22,071 apparently healthy male
physicians, aged 40-84 yr at baseline and tolerant of aspirin, over
an 18-wk run-in period, to 325 mg aspirin or placebo on alternate
days. The aspirin component was terminated after 4.9 yr due
principally to the emergence of a statistically extreme 44%
reduction in risk of first myocardial infarction among those
randomly assigned to aspirin. MEASUREMENTS: Physicians could
self-report an asthma diagnosis on questionnaires at baseline, 6 mo,
and annually thereafter. Asthma was not an a priori endpoint of the
trial.
RESULTS: Among
22,040 physicians without reported asthma at randomization, there
were 113 new asthma diagnoses in the aspirin group and 145 in the
placebo group. The hazard ratio was 0.78 (95% confidence interval,
0.61-1.00; p = 0.045). This apparent 22% lower risk of newly
diagnosed asthma among those assigned to aspirin was not modified by
baseline characteristics including smoking, body mass index, or age.
CONCLUSIONS:
Aspirin reduced the risk of newly diagnosed adult-onset asthma in a
large, randomized clinical trial of apparently healthy,
aspirin-tolerant men. This result requires replication in randomized
trials designed a priori to test this hypothesis; it does not imply
that aspirin improves symptoms in patients with asthma.