| Literature DB >> 21869886 |
Nicholaos Kakouros1, Jeffrey J Rade, Antonios Kourliouros, Jon R Resar.
Abstract
Patients with diabetes mellitus have an increased prevalence of vascular disease. Pathologic thrombosis associated with atherosclerotic plaque rupture is a major cause of morbidity and mortality. Platelets are intimately involved in the initiation and propagation of thrombosis. Evidence suggests that platelets from patients with type 2 diabetes have increased reactivity and baseline activation compared to healthy controls. We review the pathophysiology of platelet hyperreactivity in DM patients and its implications in clinical practice, with particular focus on acute coronary syndromes, percutaneous coronary intervention, and novel antiplatelet agents.Entities:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21869886 PMCID: PMC3159301 DOI: 10.1155/2011/742719
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Endocrinol ISSN: 1687-8337 Impact factor: 3.257
Figure 1Pathways involved in platelet hyperreactivity in DM patients and therapeutic targets. AGE: advanced glycation end products, RAGE: AGE receptors, PKA/B/C: protein kinase A/B/C, MAPK: p38 mitogen-activated protein kinase, TK: tyrosine kinase, NO: nitric oxide, GC: guanylate cyclase, PAR-1 TR: protease activated receptor; thrombin receptor, PI-3: phosphoinositol-3 kinase TRA: thrombin receptor antagonist, TPα: thromboxane receptor, TPRA: thromboxane receptor antagonist, and ASA: acetylsalicylic acid (aspirin). Increased levels of cAMP lead to platelet inhibition through cAMP-dependent protein kinase (PKA) which inhibits signaling though the mitogen-activated protein kinases pathway, receptor activation, thromboxane A2 formation, and activation of key enzymes such as protein kinase C. The prostaglandin, P2Y, P2X, TR, and TP are all seven transmembrane G-protein associated receptors. The TR and TP on the right present novel drug targets; their intracellular effectors are omitted for clarity. Antiplatelet drugs are shown in red.
A summary of key antiplatelet drug clinical trials in patients with diabetes mellitus.
| Study |
| Setting | Groups | Endpoint. | Pertinent findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Clopidogrel | |||||
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| 2,838/12,562 | UA, NSTEMI | Clopidogrel (300 mg LD, 75 mg MD) versus placebo in addition to standard aspirin therapy. RCT | Composite cardiovascular death, MI, or stroke. | Higher absolute risk reduction of primary outcome (16.7% to 14.2%) in DM than non-DM patients (9.9% to 7.9%), but a clopidogrel benefit of borderline statistical significance with lower relative risk reduction compared to the overall cohort (15% versus 20% resp.) |
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| 40/40 | DM patients on DAT with HTPR | Clopidogrel 75 mg MD versus Clopidogrel 150 mg MD. RCT | Platelet function testing at 60 days | Two thirds (40/64) of screened DM patients had “suboptimal response to clopidogrel” 75 mg (HTPR). |
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| 5,880/25,087 | ACS patients planned for invasive strategy | Clopidogrel (600 mg LD, 150 mg MD for 6 days, then 75 mg MD) versus Clopidogrel (300 mg LD, 75 mg MD). | Composite cardiovascular death, MI, or stroke. | No overall statistical significance between the two clopidogrel regimes on primary endpoint. |
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| 1,004/2,214 | Patients post PCI with HTPR on DAT by verifynow assay | Clopidogrel (75 mg MD) versus Clopidogrel (repeat 600 mg LD, 150 mg MD) | Composite cardiovascular death, MI, stent thrombosis. | 41% of screened patients (2214 of 5429) had HTPR on Clopidogrel 75 mg. |
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| 6,556/15,603 | Patients with stable cardiovascular disease or multiple risk factors | Clopidogrel 75 mg versus placebo in addition to aspirin 75–162 mg daily | Composite cardiovascular death, MI, stroke. | No difference in primary endpoint between aspirin and DAT. |
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| Cilostazol | |||||
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| 14/60 | Patients with HTPR after clopidogrel 300 mg loading | Clopidogrel 75 mg + cilostazol 100 mg bd versus Clopidogrel 150 mg. All patients on aspirin 200 mg/day. RCT | Platelet function testing at 30 days | Adjunctive cilostazol reduced the rate of HTPR and intensified platelet inhibition as compared with high-maintenance dose clopidogrel 150 mg/day |
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| 20/20 | DM patients on DAT (aspirin 81 mg, clopidogrel 75 mg daily) | Adjunctive Cilostazol 100 mg bd versus placebo. | Platelet function | Enhanced P2Y12 platelet receptor signaling inhibition with cilostazol in adjunct to standard DAT. |
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| 867/3,099 | Patients after DES implantation | DAT (aspirin,and clopidogrel) versus TAT (aspirin, clopidogrel and cilostazol). | Death, MI and stent thrombosis. | Cilostazol significantly reduced the 12-month risk of stent thrombosis and MI after DES implantation when added to DAT. |
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| 307/960 | Patients after DES implantation | DAT (aspirin and clopidogrel) versus TAT (aspirin, clopidogrel and cilostazol). | Cardiac death, MI, ischemic stroke, and TLR at 6 months | Enhanced platelet inhibition with TAT but no difference in composite adverse events at 6 months (entire cohort or DM patients). |
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| Prasugrel | |||||
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| 3,146/3,608 | Patients with moderate-to-high-risk UA/NSTEMI, STEMI for PCI | Clopidogrel (300 mg LD and 75 mg MD) versus Prasugrel (60 mg LD and 10 mg MD) | CV death, MI and stroke. | DM patients on prasugrel had higher reduction in endpoint compared to clopidogrel than non-DM patients (HR 0.72 versus 0.86, |
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| Ticagrelor | |||||
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| 4,662/18,624 | Patients with moderate-to-high-risk UA/NSTEMI, STEMI for PCI | Clopidogrel (300 mg LD and 75 mg MD) versus Ticagrelor (180 mg LD and 90 mg bd MD) | CV death, MI and stroke. | Ticagrelor was associated with a lower composite endpoint with no increase in bleeding in the entire cohort as well as DM patients. |
ACS: acute coronary syndrome, ADP: adenosine diphosphate, bd: twice daily, DAT: dual antiplatelet therapy, DES: drug-eluting stent, DM: diabetes mellitus, HR: hazard ratio, HTPR: high on-treatment platelet reactivity, LD: loading dose, MD: maintenance dose, MI: myocardial infarction, NSTEMI: non-ST elevation MI, RCT: randomized control trial, STEMI: ST-elevation MI, TAT: triple antiplatelet therapy, UA: unstable angina.