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©The Author(s) 2024.
World J Cardiol. Apr 26, 2024; 16(4): 191-198
Published online Apr 26, 2024. doi: 10.4330/wjc.v16.i4.191
Published online Apr 26, 2024. doi: 10.4330/wjc.v16.i4.191
Ref. | No. of patients | Reported schemes | Key message |
Brain tumor surgery | |||
Merriman et al[19], 1979 | 2 | 4-20 tablets of aspirin 325 mg/d | Complications could be associated with preoperative aspirin consumption |
Case report | |||
Hanalioglu et al[20], 2019 | 1291 | 3 groups: | ASA was not associated with increased bleeding risk |
Retrospective single-center, cohort study | No ASA (1068 patients) | ||
Stopped ASA (at least 7 d before surgery – 104 patients) | |||
Continued ASA (119 patients) | |||
Rychen et al[21], 2023 | 312 | ASA was continued perioperatively for extraaxial surgery, and discontinued 2 d before intraaxial surgery (83 patients). No ASA in prospective control (106 patients) and long-term ASA discontinuation in retrospective control group (123 patients) | Presented protocol of perioperative antithrombotics management was not associated with an increased hemorrhagic risk |
Prospective cohort study with retrospective control | |||
Enciu et al[22], 2023 | 304 | 2 groups: | Short-term (even < 2 d) discontinuation of low-dose aspirin was not associated with increased bleeding risk |
Retrospective single-center, cohort study | Short-term ASA discontinuation (lower than 7 d) (45 patients) | ||
Standard-term ASA discontinuation (259 patients) | |||
Rychen et al[7], 2023 | 646 (7 studies) | ASA was continued perioperatively in 61.8% and discontinued in 38.2% of the cases | Perioperative ASA continuation in elective craniotomies was not associated with an increased hemorrhagic risk |
Systematic review | |||
Cerebrovascular surgery | |||
Schubert et al[23], 2014 | 158 | ASA was prescribed in 138 patients pre- or intraoperatively | Antiplatelet therapy did not increase the risk of hemorrhage, but improved outcomes after revascularization procedures |
Retrospective single-center, cohort study | |||
Nakamizo et al[24], 2017 | 401 | 2 groups: | Intracranial hemorrhage after aneurism clipping was more frequent in the antithrombotics group |
Retrospective single-center, cohort study | Continued antithrombotics, including ASA (45 patients) | ||
No antithrombotics (259 patients) | |||
Rashidi et al[25], 2021 | 200 | 2 groups: | Continued ASA use was not associated with an increased risk of a postoperative hemorrhage |
Retrospective single-center, cohort study | Continued ASA or short-term ASA discontinuation (lower than 7 d) (32 patients) | ||
No ASA (168 patients) | |||
Ebel et al[26], 2021 | 215 | 2 groups: | Short (≤ 5 d) aspirin discontinuation time did not appear to have increased rates of postoperative bleeding |
Retrospective single-center, cohort study | Patients were treated with antithrombotics (50 patients) | ||
No antithrombotics (165 patients) | |||
Spinal surgery | |||
Goes et al[6], 2017 | 370 (3 studies) | 2 groups: | There is no difference in perioperative complications between aspirin continuation and discontinuation |
Meta-analysis | ASA-continuing group (170 patients) | ||
ASA-discontinuing group (200 patients) | |||
Zhang et al[29], 2017 | 414 (4 studies) | 2 groups: | Continued aspirin administration do not have an increased risk for bleeding |
Meta-analysis | ASA-continuing group | ||
ASA-discontinuing group | |||
Cheng et al[30], 2018 | 1173 (7 studies) | 3 groups: | No difference in intraoperative blood loss, operation time, and postoperative complications |
Systematic review | No ASA therapy (587 patients) | ||
Stopped ASA (3-10 d before surgery – 416 patients) | |||
Continued ASA (170 patients | |||
Claydon et al[28], 2022 | 364 | 2 groups: | There was no association of low-dose ASA continuation with increased blood loss |
Prospective, multi-center observational cohort study | ASA-continuing group (21 patients) | ||
No ASA group | |||
Tarukado et al[27], 2023 | 88 | 3 groups: | Continuing ASA did not affect perioperative complications or clinical outcomes |
Retrospective single-center, cohort study | No antithrombotics (65 patients) | ||
Stopped ASA (9 patients) | |||
Continued ASA (14 patients) |
- Citation: Kulikov A, Konovalov A, Pugnaloni PP, Bilotta F. Aspirin interruption before neurosurgical interventions: A controversial problem. World J Cardiol 2024; 16(4): 191-198
- URL: https://www.wjgnet.com/1949-8462/full/v16/i4/191.htm
- DOI: https://dx.doi.org/10.4330/wjc.v16.i4.191