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Daily Aspirin vs Split Dosing in High-risk Pregnancies (DASH)
NCT06826859 · Thomas Jefferson University
In plain English
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Official title
Dose Based Aspirin Pharmacokinetics and Pharmacodynamics in Pregnancy and Association With Pregnancy Outcomes
About this study
This is an unblinded randomized controlled Phase I/II trial comparing high risk singleton pregnancies randomized to 162mg daily (daily dose) vs 81mg q12hours (split dose). Participants will be enrolled prior to 16 weeks gestation. The primary outcome is platelet inhibition as assessed by PFA-100 epinephrine closure time, assessed 2-4 weeks after initiation and again at 28-32 weeks gestation. A subset of participants will be enrolled in a pharmacokinetic study to evaluate pharmacokinetics of aspirin in pregnancy at the two dosing intervals. Secondary outcomes include urine thromboxane at each visit, platelet associated microRNAs. Individual factors associated with aspirin pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics in pregnancy will be assessed. Finally, the relationship between these pharmacodynamic markers and pregnancy outcome will be evaluated.
Eligibility criteria
Inclusion Criteria
* Singleton gestation gestational age \<16 0/7 weeks, dating confirmed with ultrasound
* ≥1 high risk factor for preeclampsia or ≥2 moderate risk factors as per United States Preventative Services Task Force (2021)
* Recommendation for 162mg aspirin daily in pregnancy
* Age 16-55 years old
Exclusion criteria
* Contraindication to aspirin
* Current or planned use of any other anticoagulation
* Thrombocytopenia, other known platelet or bleeding disorder
* Abnormally elevated baseline PFA-100 epinephrine closure time prior to aspirin initiation
Study design
Enrollment target: 400 participants
Allocation: randomized
Masking: single
Age groups: child, adult
Timeline
Starts: 2025-06-26
Estimated completion: 2029-12-31
Last updated: 2025-07-17
Interventions
Drug: Daily aspirin (ASA)Drug: Split dose aspirin (ASA)
Primary outcomes
- • Aspirin Response PFA-100 epinephrine closure time (seconds) (2-4 weeks after aspirin initiation)
Sponsor
Thomas Jefferson University · other
With: Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (NICHD)
Contacts & investigators
ContactRupsa C Boelig, MD · contact · rupsa.boelig@jefferson.edu · 215-955-5000
All locations (1)
Thomas Jefferson UniversityRecruiting
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States