Coated or Chewable Aspirin in Patients with Established Atherosclerotic Disease and a Hybrid Strategy to Mitigate the Adverse Effects of Air Pollution: the COATED-AIR Randomized Clinical Trial
Although both enteric-coated and plain formulations of aspirin are being used commonly, there are no high-quality comparisons between these formulations with respect to clinical efficacy outcomes in patients with atherosclerotic cardiovascular diseases (ASCVD). Air pollution is also a major contributor to the excess risk of cardiovascular events in many regions of the world. However, little is known about the effect of individual-level mitigation strategies against air pollution in reducing cardiovascular outcomes. The purpose of the first randomization is to compare the efficacy and safety of enteric-coated versus plain low-dose (81 mg) aspirin formulations in a double-blind fashion. The second randomization compares a multifaceted intervention including one-page educational flashcard, cell phone text messages alerting participants on polluted days, recommending them to stay indoors or wear KN-95 facemasks provided by the study team in case of necessary outdoor activity, and recommendation to consume citrus fruits on polluted days versus usual care. Both randomization are powered for clinical outcomes and the results will inform practice.
• Adult patients (≥18 years) with documented ASCVD defined as at least one of the following:
‣ Coronary artery disease (CAD):
• Previous or recent documented type I myocardial infarction \*(if not specified, will be assumed as type I)
∙ History of coronary revascularization (percutaneous coronary intervention or coronary artery bypass graft surgery)
∙ History of obstructive CAD (\>50% stenosis) documented by coronary computed tomography (CT) or conventional angiography
⁃ Peripheral arterial disease (PAD):
• Previous or recent acute ischemic limb event (\>7 days prior)
∙ History of previous endovascular/surgical lower or upper extremities revascularization for an atherosclerotic cause
∙ History of ulcer or lower extremities amputation due to ASCVD.
⁃ Carotid arterial diseases:
• History of previous endovascular/surgical carotid artery revascularization for atherosclerotic causes
∙ History of \> 50% carotid artery stenosis based on documented imaging tests (Duplex US, CT angiography, magnetic resonance angiography, or conventional angiography)
⁃ Ischemic stroke:
• History of recent or previous documented ischemic stroke not due to atrial fibrillation, endocarditis, or systemic hypoperfusion/hypotension, being treated with low-dose aspirin
• Inhabitant of Tehran province
• Willing to participate and able to provide written informed consent