| Literature DB >> 21815879 |
Matteo Nicola Dario Di Minno1, Anna Guida, Marina Camera, Susanna Colli, Giovanni Di Minno, Elena Tremoli.
Abstract
Platelets play a central role in the pathophysiology of atherothrombosis, an inappropriate platelet activation leading to acute ischemic complications (acute myocardial infarction, ischemic stroke). In view of this, platelets are a major target for pharmacotherapy. Presently, the main classes of antiplatelet agents approved for the use in such complications are aspirin and thienopyridines. Although antiplatelet treatment with these two types of drugs, alone or in combination, leads to a significant reduction of non-fatal myocardial infarction (-32%), non-fatal stroke (-25%), and of cardiovascular death (-17%), a residual risk persists. Newer antiplatelet agents have addressed some, but not all, these limitations. Vis-à-vis their net clinical benefit, the higher potency of some of them is associated with a rise in bleeding complications. Moreover, newer thienopyridines do not show advantages over and above the older ones as to reduction of stroke. A concerted effort that takes into consideration clinical, genetic, and laboratory information is increasingly recognized as a major direction to be pursued in the area. The well-established road signs of clinical epidemiology will provide major information to define newer potentially useful targets for platelet pharmacology.Entities:
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Year: 2011 PMID: 21815879 PMCID: PMC3231843 DOI: 10.3109/07853890.2011.582137
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ann Med ISSN: 0785-3890 Impact factor: 4.709
Platelet activation: agonists and signal transduction.
| Agonist | Receptor(s) | Effect(s) | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|
| ADP | Gaq-coupled P2Y1; Gai-coupled P2Y12 | P2Y1: shape change; P2Y12: aggregation | P2Y12 amplifies aggregation induced by 5-HT, T×A2, and thrombin |
| T×A2 | TPa;TPb (secondary) | Shape change; platelet recruitment; platelet aggregation | In endothelial cells, COX-1-derived PGH2 is converted into PGI2, a strong antiaggregating and vasodilating agent |
| Thrombin | PAR-1; PAR-4 (secondary); GpIbα | Shape change; ADP and T×A2 secretion; P-selectin expression; αIIbβ3 integrin receptor; platelet activation | PAR-1 and P2Y12 cross-reaction (via Gαq and Gai-coupled receptors) |
| Serotonin | 5HT-2A receptors | Shape change; platelet recruitment; retention of fibrinogen and thrombospondin on the platelet surface | Implicated in shear-induced platelet aggregation and thrombus propagation |
Molecular targets of newer and emerging antiplatelet therapies.
| Drug | Mechanism | Comment |
|---|---|---|
| Prasugrel | P2Y12 receptor inhibition | Irreversible inhibition; orally active |
| Cangrelor | Adenosine triphosphate analog with a high affinity for the P2Y12 receptor | Reversible inhibition; intravenous |
| Ticagrelor | P2Y12 and (partly) P2Y1 receptor inhibition | Reversible inhibition; orally active |
| Elinogrel | P2Y12 receptor inhibition | Reversible; oral and intravenous |
| Vorapaxar (E530348) | PAR-1 inhibitor | No effect on thrombin-induced fibrin production, orally active |
| Atopaxar (E5555) | Low-molecular-weight PAR-1 inhibitor | Inhibition of expression of the inflammatory markers (sCD40L and interleukin 6 and the expression of P-selectin), orally active |
| Sarpogrelate | Selective inhibitor of serotonin (5HT-2A) platelet receptors | Orally active |
| DZ-697b | Inhibits collagen and ristocetin-mediated platelet adhesion and aggregation | Orally active |
| Gas6 (growth arrest-specific gene 6) | Vitamin K-dependent protein; a polyclonal anti-Gas6 antibody lowers platelet thromboembolism induced by the intravenous injection of collagen plus epinephrine and aggregation by ADP | Stored in platelet a granules, released upon activation. Through its carboxy-terminal domains it interacts with the membrane receptor tyrosine kinases (RTKs) of the TAM family (Tyro3, Axl, MerTK); through its vitamin K-dependent Gla module it interacts with phosphatidylserine-containing membranes |
| Matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) | By potentiating PI3K activation, MMP-2 amplifies platelet aggregation regardless of the presence of aspirin and of P2Y12 receptor antagonists | Involved in tissue remodeling and in the progression of atherosclerosis, MMP-2 is present in platelet cytosol and released upon aggregation |
| CD40 ligand (CD40L; CD 154) | On activated platelets an exodomain (soluble CD40 ligand, sCD40L) is released and binds to αIIbβ3 integrin, thus promoting thrombus stabilization and blunting platelet reactivity | Transmembrane protein expressed on the surface of activated platelets. Shedding of sCD40L from the surface of activated platelets can be prevented by an anti-CD40L antibody (G28-5) |
Efficacy and safety of newer antiplatelet drugs. Results from phase III studies.
| Study (ref) | |
|---|---|
| TRITON-TIMI 38 ( | |
| Study design | Prasugrel (60-mg loading dose (LD) 10-mg maintenance dose (MD) versus Clopidogrel (300 mg LD 75 mg MD) |
| Efficacy end-point | 9.9% versus 12.1%; |
| Safety end-point | 2.4% versus 1.8%; |
| CHAMPION-PCI ( | |
| Study design | Cangrelor (bolus 30 μg/kg + infusion 4 μg/kg/min) + Clopidogrel (600 mg LD) versus Placebo + Clopidogrel (600 mg LD) |
| Efficacy end-point | 7.5% versus 7.9%; |
| Safety end-point | 0.4% versus 0.3%; |
| CHAMPION-PLATFORM ( | |
| Study design | Cangrelor (bolus 30 μg/kg or 4 μg/kg/min infusion for a 2 h) + Clopidogrel (600 mg LD) versus Placebo + Clopidogrel (600 mg LD) |
| Efficacy end-point | 7.0% versus 8.0%; |
| Safety end-point | 3.5% versus 5.5%; |
| The PLATO trial ( | |
| Study design | Ticagrelor (180 mg LD + 90 mg twice a day MD) or Clopidogrel (300-600 mg LD + 75 mg MD) |
| Efficacy end-point | 9.8% versus 11.7%; |
| Safety end-point | 11.6% versus 11.2%; |
Efficacy end-point: CV death/non-fatal Ml/non-fatal stroke. Safety end-point: major bleeding.