AI Article Synopsis

  • - A systematic review examined the safety of low-dose aspirin use in patients undergoing robot-assisted radical prostatectomy (RARP), analyzing 767 studies to find five relevant ones involving 1,481 patients.
  • - Results showed no significant differences in overall and major complication rates, blood loss, or hospital stays between patients taking aspirin and those who were not, although the blood transfusion rate was slightly higher in the aspirin group.
  • - The conclusion indicates that using low-dose aspirin in the perioperative period does not increase surgical risks or complications, except for a marginal increase in blood transfusion rates.

Article Abstract

Background: Low-dose aspirin use has been correlated with an increased risk of bleeding and overall complications in surgical and invasive diagnostic procedures. In this review, our aim was to analyze the current literature on whether robot-assisted radical prostatectomy (RARP) is feasible and safe in patients taking low-dose aspirin perioperatively.

Methods: A systematic review was performed identifying a total of 767 studies, published between January 2000 and September 2017, with five of these studies meeting the inclusion criteria for the meta-analysis, totalizing 1481 patients underwent RARP. Patients were divided into two groups: taking aspirin (group A) and those not taking aspirin (group B) perioperatively.

Results: There were no significant differences between groups in the overall [group A 10.7% group B 15.7%, risk ratio (RR) 0.83; = 0.45; = 0%] or major complication rates (group A 1% group B 3%, RR 0.98; = 0.98; ² = 0%), rate of cardiovascular events (group A 1.4% and group B 0.5%, RR 2.06; = 0.24; = 9%), blood loss (group A 278 ml group B 307 ml, SMD -0.12; = 0.91; = 96%), or hospital length of stay [group A 4 days (3-5) and group B 4 days (3-4), SMD -0.09; = 0.52; ² = 0%]. There was a slightly higher blood-transfusion rate in group A (2.6%) group B (1.6%) (RR, 5.05; = 0.04; = 0%).

Conclusion: Continued aspirin use in the perioperative period does not correlate with an increase in surgical morbidity, blood loss, or hospital length of stay. There was a slightly higher blood-transfusion rate in patients taking low-dose aspirin (group A) perioperatively.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6329037PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1756287218816595DOI Listing

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