| Literature DB >> 24137273 |
Feng-Huan Hu1, Xin Yi, Yue-Jing Yang, Shu-Bin Qiao, Yong-Jian Wu, Jian-Song Yuan.
Abstract
Previous studies have shown that the combination of cilostazol and aspirin may be a more effective regimen than ticlopidine plus aspirin in the prevention of late restenosis and acute or subacute stent thrombosis following coronary stenting; however, individually published results are inconclusive. The aim of this meta-analysis was to compare the differences in late restenosis and stent thrombosis between cilostazol plus aspirin and ticlopidine plus aspirin for patients with coronary heart disease (CHD) following coronary stenting. A literature search of Pubmed, Embase, Web of Science and Chinese BioMedicine (CBM) databases was conducted from 1998 to March 1, 2013 and statistical analysis was performed using Stata statistical software, version 12.0. Twelve randomized controlled trials were included in the study, with a total of 2,708 patients with CHD following coronary stenting. The patient population comprised 1,371 patients treated with cilostazol plus aspirin and 1,337 patients treated with ticlopidine plus aspirin. The meta-analysis showed that cilostazol plus aspirin demonstrated a lower rate of restenosis than ticlopidine plus aspirin [odds ratio (OR)=0.83, 95% confidence interval (CI)=0.69-0.99, P=0.047]. A significant difference was also observed in the average percent diameter stenosis between cilostazol plus aspirin and ticlopidine plus aspirin [standardized weight difference (SMD)= -0.57, 95% CI=-0.92, -0.23, P=0.001). However, there were no significant differences in the rates of acute or subacute stent thrombosis between cilostazol plus aspirin and ticlopidine plus aspirin. The present meta-analysis suggests that cilostazol plus aspirin may result in a lower restenosis rate and percent diameter stenosis than ticlopidine plus aspirin for patients with CHD following coronary stenting.Entities:
Keywords: cilostazol; coronary heart disease; coronary stenting; meta-analysis; ticlopidine
Year: 2013 PMID: 24137273 PMCID: PMC3786799 DOI: 10.3892/etm.2013.1190
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Exp Ther Med ISSN: 1792-0981 Impact factor: 2.447
Figure 1Flow chart of literature search and study selection.
Characteristics of included studies in this meta-analysis.
| First author (ref) | Year | Country | Number of cases | Follow-up (months) | Drug doses (mg/dosage frequency) | PEDro score | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
|
| |||||||
| Cilostazol plus aspirin | Ticlopidine plus aspirin | Cilostazol plus aspirin | Ticlopidine plus aspirin | |||||
| Yoon | 1999 | Korea | 147 | 149 | 1 | aspirin 100 (mg/day) | aspirin 100 mg/day | 5 |
| cilostazol 100 (mg/bid), 1 month | ticlopidine 250 mg/bid | |||||||
| Park | 2000 | Korea | 208 | 201 | 6 | aspirin 200 (mg/day) | aspirin 200 mg/day | 6 |
| cilostazol 100 (bid) | ticlopidine 250 mg/bid | |||||||
| Kozuma | 2001 | Japan | 65 | 65 | 12 | aspirin 200 mg/day | aspirin 200 mg/day | 7 |
| cilostazol 200 mg/day | ticlopidine 200 mg/bid | |||||||
| Nagaoka | 2001 | Japan | 18 | 17 | 4 | aspirin 81 mg/day | aspirin 81 mg/day | 6 |
| cilostazol 200 mg/day | ticlopidine 200 mg/bid, 4 months | |||||||
| Tanabe | 2001 | Japan | 54 | 50 | 6 | aspirin 81 mg/day | aspirin 243 mg/day | 5 |
| cilostazol 200 mg/day | ticlopidine 200 mg/bid | |||||||
| Kamishirado | 2002 | Japan | 54 | 57 | 6 | aspirin 81 mg/day | aspirin 81 mg/day | 8 |
| cilostazol 200 mg/day | ticlopidine 200 mg/bid | |||||||
| Inoue | 2004 | Japan | 34 | 32 | - | aspirin 81 mg/day | aspirin 81 mg/day | 6 |
| cilostazol 200 mg/day | ticlopidine 200 mg/bid | |||||||
| Sekiguchi | 2004 | Japan | 144 | 138 | 6 | aspirin 81 mg/day | aspirin 81 mg/day | 7 |
| cilostazol 200 mg/day | ticlopidine 200 mg/bid | |||||||
| Ge | 2005 | China | 201 | 196 | 9 | aspirin 100 mg/day | aspirin 100 mg/day | 8 |
| cilostazol 100 mg/bid | ticlopidine 250 mg/bid | |||||||
| Han | 2005 | China | 50 | 50 | 6 | aspirin 100 mg/day | aspirin 100 mg/day | 6 |
| cilostazol 100 mg/bid | ticlopidine 250 mg/bid | |||||||
| Takeyasu | 2005 | Japan | 321 | 321 | 6 | aspirin 80–200 mg/day | aspirin 80–200 mg/day | 6 |
| cilostazol 200 mg/day | ticlopidine 200 mg/day | |||||||
| Hong | 2006 | China | 75 | 61 | 6 | aspirin 100 mg/day | aspirin 100 mg/day | 8 |
| cilostazol 200 mg/day | ticlopidine 500 mg/day, 1 month | |||||||
Ref, reference number; PEDro, Physiotherapy Evidence Database.
Figure 2Forest plot of odds ratios (ORs) for the difference in the rate of restenosis between cilostazol plus aspirin and ticlopidine plus aspirin. CI, confidence interval.
Figure 3Forest plot of odds ratios (ORs) for the difference in average percent diameter stenosis between cilostazol plus aspirin and ticlopidine plus aspirin. CI, confidence interval.
Figure 4Forest plot of odds ratios (ORs) for the difference in the rates of stent thrombosis between cilostazol plus aspirin and ticlopidine plus aspirin. CI, confidence interval.
Figure 5Sensitivity analysis of the summary odds ratio coefficients on (A) the rates of restenosis and (B) stent thrombosis between cilostazol plus aspirin and ticlopidine plus aspirin. aAcute stent thrombosis; bsubacute stent thrombosis. Results were computed by omitting each study in turn. Meta-analysis random-effects estimates (exponential form) were used. The two ends of the dotted lines represent the 95% confidence intervals (CIs).
Figure 6Begger’s funnel plot of publication bias in the selected studies on the rates of (A) restenosis and (B) stent thrombosis between cilostazol plus aspirin and ticlopidine plus aspirin. Each point represents a separate study for the indicated correlation. LogOR, natural logarithm of OR; OR, odds ratio; horizontal line, mean magnitude of the effect; seLogOR, standard error of LogOR.