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Many cancer patients who have
heart attacks often are not treated with life saving aspirin given
the belief in the medical community that they could experience lethal
bleeding. Researchers at The University of Texas M. D. Anderson Cancer
Center, however, say that notion is now proven wrong and that without
aspirin, the majority of these patients will die.
Researchers say that their study, to be
published in the February 1, 2007 issue
of the journal Cancer and now available
online, turns common medical assumptions
upside down and will likely change medical
practice for cancer patients. Because aspirin
can thin blood and cancer patients experience
low platelet counts and abnormal clotting,
physicians view aspirin as a relative contraindication.
Given that blood platelets are responsible
for the clotting process, physicians do
not eagerly prescribe aspirin as a standard
treatment.
In this study, however, the investigators
found that 9 of 10 cancer patients with
thrombocytopenia (low platelet count) who
were experiencing a heart attack and who
did not receive aspirin died, whereas only
one patient died in a group of 17 similar
cancer patients who received aspirin. They
also found aspirin helps cancer patients
with normal platelet count survive heart
attacks, just as it does for people without
cancer.
"The notion that heart attacks in
patients with low platelets should be treated
with clot-dissolving aspirin defies logic,
that is unless you suspect that the cancer
is interfering with platelet function," says
the study's senior investigator and author,
Jean-Bernard Durand, M.D., assistant professor
in the Department of Cardiology at M. D.
Anderson Cancer Center.
"We believe tumors may be releasing
chemicals that allow the cancer to form
new blood supplies which makes blood more
susceptible to forming clots." Durand,
a heart failure specialist, says. "There
appears to be a platelet paradox suggesting
that cancer may affect the mechanism of
the way that blood clots, and from this
analysis, we have found that the single
most important predictor of survival in
these patients is whether or not they received
aspirin." Durand says more research
is needed to better understand this contraindication.
According to the World Health Organization
there are approximately 10 million cancer
patients worldwide, of which 1.5 million
may develop blood clots during their cancer
treatment and, as such, are at a much higher
risk of dying from heart disease if not
treated properly. "Now that we have
this study, it would be a travesty if you
survive treatment for cancer only to die
of a heart attack soon thereafter," Durand
says.
According to Durand, no guidelines currently
exist for treatment of heart attacks in
patients with cancer. He says that physicians
are especially perplexed about what to
do for cancer patients with thrombosis
(blood clots), a condition that affects
about 15 percent of all cancer patients
and can be due to the use of chemotherapy
or the presence of cancer.
Durand came to M. D. Anderson in 2000
to start the Cardiomyopathy Services, which
is believed to be the only program in the
world specifically designed to look at
cardiovascular complications caused by
chemotherapy treatment. He is also the
co-founder of CONQUER (Cardiology Oncology
International Quest to Educate and Research
Heart Failure in Cancer), a newly created
organization with goals of increasing the
success of chemotherapy by reducing cardiovascular
disease as a barrier and long term risk.
He and anesthesiologist Mona Sarkiss,
M.D., Ph.D., made the observation that
patients with thrombocytopenia who suffered
a heart attack and were being treated in
the intensive care unit at M. D. Anderson
tended to die more often when they were
not given aspirin. However, they noted
that some of the patients given aspirin
and/or beta-blockers had "great" clinical
outcomes. "Because no practice guidelines
exist, physicians were treating their patients
with great variability and the disparity
was obvious," Durand says.
Sarkiss, who is the study's lead author,
Durand, and a team of researchers which
included investigators from Baylor College
of Medicine and Duke University Medical
Center, conducted a retrospective analysis
of cancer patients treated for heart attacks
at M. D. Anderson Cancer Center in 2001.
These 70 patients were divided into two
groups based on their platelet counts,
and data was collected on the use of aspirin,
bleeding complications, and survival.
They found that heart attack patients
with low platelets who did not receive
aspirin had a seven-day survival rate of
6%, compared with 90% survival in those
who received aspirin. Dr. Durand notes
that there were no severe bleeding complications
in patients who used aspirin. Conversely,
patients with low platelet counts who formed
a blood clot and were not exposed to aspirin
died.
The beneficial effect of aspirin also
was seen in patients with normal platelet
counts. Seven-day survival was 88% in aspirin-treated
patients as compared to 45% in patients
who did not receive aspirin, the researchers
found.
Durand observed that these deaths rates
are abnormally high. "In the non-cancer
patient with acute coronary syndrome anywhere
in the United States, an expected seven-day
mortality is less than 1%," he says.
There were parallel findings for those
patients in either group who were treated
with beta-blockers, which block the heart's
use of adrenalin. The protective effect
was not as strong as seen with aspirin,
but was still life saving.
In those patients with a normal platelet
count, 91% survived seven days when treated
with beta-blockers, whereas 36% survived
if they were not treated with the agent.
In the thrombocytopenic group, 73% survived
seven days when treated with beta-blockers,
whereas only 13% survived if they were
not treated.
Investigators working with Durand and
Sarkiss were: Andrew Shaw, M.D., from Duke;
Nasser Lakkis, M.D. from Baylor; and S.
Wamique Yusuf, M.D., Carla Warneke, M.D.,
Gregory Botz, M.D., Cheryl Hirsch-Ginsburg,
M.D., J. Chris Champion, M.D., Joseph Swafford,
M.D., and Daniel Lenihan, M.D., from M.
D. Anderson. |