@article {Moore:August 1999:1173-2563:89, author = "Moore N.", author = "Vanganse E.", author = "Leparc J-M.", author = "Wall R.", author = "Schneid H.", author = "Farhan M.", author = "Verriere F.", author = "Pelen F.", title = "The PAIN Study: Paracetamol, Aspirin and Ibuprofen New Tolerability Study: A Large-Scale, Randomised Clinical Trial Comparing the Tolerability of Aspirin, Ibuprofen and Paracetamol for Short-Term Analgesia", journal = "Clinical Drug Investigation", volume = "18", year = "August 1999", abstract = "

Objective: This study aimed to compare directly aspirin (acetylsalicylic acid), ibuprofen and paracetamol (acetaminophen), first-line analgesics which are generally well tolerated, from a safety perspective in general practice.

Methods: This was a blinded, multicentre study in general practice of up to 7 days of aspirin, paracetamol (both up to 3g daily) or ibuprofen (up to 1.2g daily), administered for common painful conditions, using patient-generated data with physician assistance. The main outcome was the rate of significant adverse events (serious, severe or moderate events, events resulting in treatment discontinuation or a physician visit). Statistical analysis tested for equivalence between ibuprofen and paracetamol, and for difference with aspirin.

Results: 1108 general practitioners included 8677 adults (2900 aspirin, 2886 ibuprofen, 2888 paracetamol; three patients had no code label number). 8633 (99.5%) were evaluable, of whom 8233 (95%) adhered to the study protocol. The main indications were musculoskeletal or back pain (48%), sore throat, the common cold and flu (31%). Rates of significant adverse events were: aspirin 18.7%, ibuprofen 13.7%, and paracetamol 14.5%. Ibuprofen was statistically equivalent to paracetamol. Both were significantly better tolerated than aspirin (p < 0.001). Total gastrointestinal events (including dyspepsia) and abdominal pain were less frequent with ibuprofen (4 and 2.8%, respectively) than with paracetamol (5.3 and 3.9%) or aspirin (7.1 and 6.8%) [all p < 0.035]. There were six cases of non-serious gastrointestinal bleeding, four with paracetamol and two with aspirin, and one case of peptic ulcer with aspirin.

Conclusion: The overall tolerability of ibuprofen in this large-scale study was equivalent to that of paracetamol and better than that of aspirin. These findings could lead to a reassessment of the use of first-line analgesics for the short-term management of painful conditions in general practice, recommending ibuprofen first, because of the poor tolerability of aspirin and the potential risks of paracetamol overdose.

", pages = "89-98(10)", url = "http://www.ingentaconnect.com/content/adis/cdi/1999/00000018/00000002/art00001" }