Aspirin offers no protection against diabetic retinopathy

05 Jul 2024
Aspirin offers no protection against diabetic retinopathy

Use of aspirin, although safe, does not appear to provide any meaningful beneficial effects for diabetic retinopathy (DR), a study has shown.

Researchers performed a substudy of ASCEND*, a double-masked, randomized, placebo-controlled trial of aspirin 100 mg for the primary prevention of serious cardiovascular events in a total of 15,480 adults with diabetes (aged ≥40 years) in the UK.

Linkage data were obtained from electronic National Health Service Diabetic Eye Screening Programme records in England and Wales, and participant-reported eye events were confirmed through a medical record review. Finally, intention-to-treat analyses of time until the first primary efficacy and safety outcomes were carried out using log-rank methods.

The primary efficacy endpoint was the first record of referable disease after randomization, a composite of referable retinopathy or referable maculopathy. The safety outcome was the first sight-threatening eye bleed, resulting in unresolved visual loss or requiring an urgent intervention such as laser photocoagulation, vitreoretinal surgery, intraocular injection, or a combination thereof.

Of the ASCEND participants, 7,360 were included in this substudy. Among these diabetic patients, 539 (14.6 percent) had a referable disease event in the aspirin group as opposed to 522 (14.2 percent) in the placebo group (rate ratio, 1.03, 95 percent confidence interval [CI], 0.91‒1.16; p=0.64) during a mean follow-up of 6.5 years.

Likewise, no statistically significant difference was observed in the number of sight-threatening eye bleed events between the aspirin and placebo groups (0.7 percent vs 0.8 percent; rate ratio, 0.89, 95 percent CI, 0.62‒1.27).

“These data exclude any clinically meaningful benefits of aspirin for DR but give reassurance regarding the ophthalmologic safety of aspirin,” the researchers said.

*A Study of Cardiovascular Events in Diabetes

Ophthalmology 2024;131:771-779