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Association of Platelet Thromboxane Inhibition by Low-Dose Aspirin With Platelet Count and Cytoreductive Therapy in Essential Thrombocythemia

Authors :
Giuseppe Gaetano Loscocco
Daniele Cattaneo
Alfredo Dragani
Maria Luigia Randi
Francesco Rodeghiero
Elena Rossi
Carlo Patrono
Andrea Timillero
Alessandro M. Vannucchi
Paola Ranalli
Mauro Di Ianni
Giuseppe Carli
Cristina Bucelli
Francesca Palandri
Giovanna Petrucci
Alessandra Iurlo
Eloise Beggiato
Silvia Betti
Denise Soldati
Valerio De Stefano
Benedetta Porro
Alessandra Ricco
Irene Bertozzi
Giorgina Specchia
Marco Ruggeri
Giuseppe Lanzarone
Viviana Cavalca
Stefania Priolo
Bianca Rocca
Elena Maria Elli
Aspirin Regimens in EsSential thrombocythemia (Ares) Investigators
Nicola Vianelli
Alberto Tosetto
Source :
Clinical pharmacology and therapeutics. 111(4)
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Essential thrombocythemia (ET) is a myeloproliferative neoplasm characterized by enhanced platelet production and thrombotic complications. The inhibition of platelet cyclooxygenase (COX) activity by the standard once-daily aspirin is mostly incomplete due to accelerated thrombopoiesis. The phase II Aspirin Regimens in EsSential thrombocythemia (ARES) trial has recently compared the efficacy of once- vs. twice- or three-times daily low-dose aspirin in inhibiting platelet thromboxane (TX) A2 production, as reflected by serum (s) TXB2 measurements. The present substudy characterized the determinants of the highly variable response to the standard aspirin 100 mg once-daily regimen in fully compliant patients with ET and the effects of the experimental dosing regimens on response variability. By multivariable analysis, the platelet count (directly) and cytoreductive treatment (inversely) were significantly associated with sTXB2 values in 218 patients with ET. However, the platelet count positively correlated with sTXB2 in patients not being treated with cytoreductive drugs (ρ = 0.51, P

Details

ISSN :
15326535
Volume :
111
Issue :
4
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Clinical pharmacology and therapeutics
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....1ff8e78a5f6eb44ada1197b975cbdc39