Low-Dose Aspirin, Coxibs, and other NSAIDS: A Clinical Mosaic Emerges

  1. Carlo Patrono1 and
  2. Colin Baigent2
  1. 1Department of Pharmacology, Catholic University School of Medicine, Rome, Italy and
  2. 2Clinical Trial Service Unit and Epidemiological Studies Unit, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK

Abstract

Aspirin has been a commercial drug for over a century, although for most of this history, an understanding of its mechanism of action, as an inhibitor of cyclooxygenase (COX) activity and thus of prostanoid synthesis, was lacking. Over the past fifty years, a large number of other nonsteroidal antiinflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) have been developed, and a much deeper understanding of inflammation and prostanoid action has emerged. Indeed, a new class of selective inhibitors of the cyclooxygenase-2 isozyme was introduced, about ten years ago, and these so-called coxibs quickly became regarded as preferable, in certain clinical contexts, to avoid side effects associated with the use of traditional NSAIDs. This regard for coxibs has been challenged by the unraveling of a previously unknown cardiotoxicity associated with COX-2 inhibition. Here, we discuss the mechanisms underlying the cardiovascular effects of low-dose aspirin, traditional NSAIDs, and coxibs, and we attempt to reconcile the human pharmacology of COX isozyme inhibition with the contrasting cardiovascular phenotypes that have emerged from randomized clinical trials.

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