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. 2021 Jan 22;77(7):943–954. doi: 10.1007/s00228-021-03089-x

Table 4.

GRADE table for adverse events, aspirin vs. control

Certainty assessment No. of events/patients (% experienced) Effect of aspirin vs. control Confidence in efficacy statement
No. of studies Study design Risk of bias Inconsistency Indirectness Imprecision Other Aspirin No aspirin Relative (95% CI) Absolute (95% CI) Efficacy statement
Adverse events—any
  1 RCT Not seriousa Not serious Seriousb Not serious None 82/156 (52.6%) 57/154 (37.0%) OR 1.89 (1.20 to 2.97) 156 more per 1000 (from 43 more to 266 more) Aspirin increases risk of adverse events

⨁⨁⨁◯

Moderate

Adverse events—serious
  1 RCT Seriousa Not serious Seriousb Very seriousc None 63/156 (40.4%) 52/154 (33.8%) OR 1.33 (0.84 to 2.11) 66 more per 1000 (from 38 fewer to 181 more) Aspirin has no significant effect on the risk of serious adverse events

⨁◯◯◯

Very low

Adverse events—severe bleeding
  1 RCT Not seriousa not serious Seriousb Not serious None 13/156 (8.3%) 2/154 (1.3%) OR 6.91 (1.53 to 31.15) 70 more per 1000 (from 7 more to 278 more) Aspirin increases risk for severe bleeding

⨁⨁⨁◯

Moderate

Adverse events—intracranial haemorrhage
  3d Non-RCT Seriousd Not serious Seriouse Not applicablef None

Pooled data from trials: aspirin group 7/221 (3.2%), control group 0/212 (0%)

OR 14.86 (0.83 to 250.43)

30 more per 1000 (0.2 less to 353 more)g

Registry data (after adjustments and competing risk correction): compared to no dementia/no aspirin—aspirin group HR 2.22 (1.07–4.62), control group HR 2.02 (1.10–3.72)

Est. numbers of ICH—aspirin 9 (4–19)/3476 person-years, control group 11 (6–20)/4452 person-years

Est. absolute difference—1 more per 1000 people (15 less to 20 more)

Aspirin has no statistically significant effect on the risk of intracranial haemorrhage

⨁◯◯◯

Very low

CI, confidence interval; OR, odds ratio

aCochrane risk of bias tool highlighted high levels of deviation from intended treatment (decreases confidence in null findings but not positive findings as intention-to-treat analysis used)

bIncludes only those with Alzheimer’s disease and without high vascular risk

cConfidence interval crosses lines of clinical importance on both benefit and harm

dIncludes pooled randomised and non-randomised data (Thoonsen et al.), primarily randomised from AD2000 (risk of bias felt possible from deviation from intended treatment) and registry study (Lee et al., observational but low formal risk of bias)

eIncludes only those with Alzheimer’s disease

fStudies are not combined; however, it is noted that estimates from one study cross the line of clinically significant harm, and the other study crosses the lines of both significant harm and significant benefit

gEffect rare and calculation of absolute effect confidence intervals are based on estimates of background rate based on 1:1000 over 2 years

fAs calculated by Cochrane Review Manager