| Literature DB >> 21234304 |
Clotilde Balucani1, Kristian Barlinn, Zeljko Zivanovic, Lucilla Parnetti, Mauro Silvestrini, Andrei V Alexandrov.
Abstract
With majority of ischemic strokes attributable to atherothrombosis and many being predictable after transient ischemic attacks (TIA), the role of early secondary prevention with antiplatelet agents is under renewed investigation. Prior major clinical trials of various secondary stroke prevention regimens pointed to a greater efficacy of dual antiplatelet agents if initiated early from symptom onset. This paper examines data and rationale behind dual antiplatelet regimens across the completed clinical trials. The safety of dual antiplatelets approach is of concern, but it could be outweighed, at least in early management, by a greater reduction in recurrence of ischemic events since this risk is "front loaded" after minor stroke or TIA. Aspirin monotherapy, though considered standard of care, is compared to aspirin-extended release dipiridamole and its combination with clopidogrel in early-phase completed and efficacy-phase ongoing clinical trials.Entities:
Year: 2010 PMID: 21234304 PMCID: PMC3018624 DOI: 10.4061/2010/427418
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Stroke Res Treat
Randomized clinical trials on aspirin plus dipyridamole after stroke or TIA.
| Trial | Population | Antiplatelet regimen | Endpoints | Major findings |
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| ESPS-2 [ | 6602 patients with prior (<3 months) TIA or ischemic stroke | Aspirin 25 mg twice daily or ER-dipyridamole 200 mg twice daily oraspirin 25 mg plus ER-dipyridamole 200 mg twice daily or placebo | Stroke (fatal or nonfatal), death, stroke and/or death | Significant risk reduction (37%, |
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| ESPRIT [ | 2603 patients with prior (<6 months) TIA or minor ischemic stroke of arterial origin | Aspirin 30–325 mg/d plus dipyridamole 200 mg twice daily or aspirin 30–325 mg/d alone | Vascular death, nonfatal stroke, nonfatal MI, or major bleeding complication | Significant relative risk reduction (20%, hazard ratio 0.80, 95% CI 0.66–0.98) in the primary endpoint with combination therapy |
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| PROFESS [ | 20332 patients with prior stroke (<3 months) | Aspirin 25 mg plus ER-dipyridamole 200 mg twice daily or clopidogrel 75 mg/d alone | Stroke recurrence and composite of stroke, MI, or vascular death | The trial did not meet the predefined criteria for noninferiority. Recurrent stroke: 9.0% ER-dipyridamole plus aspirin, 8.8% clopidogrel; hazard ratio 1.01, 95% CI 0.92–1.11. Composite endpoint: 13.1% ER-dipyridamole plus aspirin, 13.1% clopidogrel; hazard ratio 0.99, 95% CI 0.92–1.07, |
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| EARLY [ | 543 patients with ischemic stroke within 24 hours of symptomonset | Aspirin 25 mg plus ER-dipyridamole 200 mg twice daily or aspirin 100 mg/d alone for 7 days. All patients were then given aspirin plus ER-dipyridamole for up to 90 day | Functional neurological status (mRS) at 90 days. Vascular adverse events (nonfatal stroke, TIA, nonfatal MI, and major bleeding complications) and mortality within first 90 days | No significant difference between the groups in good functional outcome (mRS 0–2; OR 1.37, 95% CI 0.86–2.18, |
Legend: TIA: transient ischemic attack; ER: extended released; MI: myocardial infarction; CI: confidence interval.
Randomized clinical trials on aspirin plus clopidogrel at different timing after stroke or TIA.
| Trial | Population | Antiplatelet regimen | Primary Endpoints | Major findings |
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| MATCH [ | 7599 high-risk patients with prior (<3 months) ischemic stroke or TIA | Aspirin 325 mg/d plus clopidogrel 75 mg/d versus clopidogrel 75 mg/d alone | Ischemic stroke, MI, vascular death. | Nonsignificant relative risk reduction (6.4%, |
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| CHARISMA [ | 15603 patients with established prior CVD (<5 years) or multiple vascular risk factors | Clopidogrel 75 mg/d plus aspirin 75–162 mg/d versus aspirin 75–162 mg/d alone | MI, Stroke, or vascular death. | Nonsignificant relative risk reduction (7%, |
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| ACTIVE-A [ | 7554 high-risk AF patients, unsuitable for vitamin K antagonists | Clopidogrel 75 mg/d plus aspirin 75–100 mg/d versus placebo plus aspirin 75–100 mg/d | Stroke, MI, systemic | Significant reduction in major vascular events especially stroke (28%, |
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| CARESS [ | 107 patients with TIA or ischemic stroke (<3 months) due to carotid artery stenosis and MES on TCD | Clopidogrel 300 mg load, then 75 mg/d plus aspirin 75 mg/d versus aspirin 75 mg/d alone | Proportion of patients with MES at day 7, MES frequency per hour at days 2 and 7 | Significant relative risk reduction in both primary (39.8%, |
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| FASTER [ | 392 patients with TIA or minor stroke within 24 hours of symptom onset | Clopidogrel 300 mg load, then 75 mg/d plus aspirin 81 mg/d plus simvastatin 40 mg/d versus aspirin (± simvastatin) alone | Any stroke (ischemic or hemorrhagic) within 90 days. | Nonsignificant absolute risk reduction (3.8%, |
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| CLAIR [ | 100 patients with symptomatic (TIA or stroke within previous 7 days) intra- or extracranial artery stenosis and MES on TCD | Clopidogrel 300 mg load, then 75 mg/d plus aspirin 75–160 mg/d versus aspirin alone for 7 days | Proportion of patients with MES at day 2 | Significant relative risk reduction in primary endpoint (42.4%, |
Legend: MI: myocardial infarction; TIA: transient ischemic attack; CVD: cerebrovascular disease; AF: atrial fibrillation; MES: microembolic signals; TCD: transcranial Doppler.