| Literature DB >> 26184420 |
G J A Vos1, N Bennaghmouch, K Qaderdan, J M Ten Berg.
Abstract
A significant number of patients with atrial fibrillation, treated with oral anticoagulants, present with an acute coronary syndrome. Many of these patients have an indication for coronary angiography. The introduction of non-vitamin K antagonist oral anticoagulants (NOACs) and the novel P2Y12 inhibitors has generated new uncertainty about the optimal treatment regimen, whether triple or dual therapy should be given and which is the most beneficial P2Y12 inhibitor (clopidogrel, ticagrelor, prasugrel). In this article, we will summarise the practical advice on the management of acute coronary syndrome patients requiring oral anticoagulants following the recent consensus document of the European Society of Cardiology (ESC) Working Group on Thrombosis in association with the European Heart Rhythm Association (EHRA) and ESC guidelines.Entities:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26184420 PMCID: PMC4547947 DOI: 10.1007/s12471-015-0727-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neth Heart J ISSN: 1568-5888 Impact factor: 2.380
Triple therapy versus dual therapy (OAC+aspirin or P2Y12 inhibitor)
| Sarafoff et al. (registry) [ | Lamberts et al. (registry) [ | AFCAS (registry) [ | WOEST (Multicentre, RCT) [ | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Population | Indication OAC+DES | AF+ACS and/or PCI with stenting | AF+PCI with stenting | OAC indication+PCI with stenting |
| No. of patients | 515 (209 DAPT, 306 TT) | 11480 (Danish national registry) | 975 (914 included in final analysis) | 563 |
| Follow-up in months | 24 | 12 | 12 | 12 |
| Therapy | Triple vs double therapy | TT vs vitamin K antagonist+aspirin or clopidogrel | TT vs double therapy (OAC+clopidogrel) | TT vs dual therapy |
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| Death, MI, ST or stroke | Cardiovascular death, MI, or stroke | Major adverse cardiac/cerebrovascular events | Death, myocardial infarction, stroke, target-vessel revascularisation, and stent thrombosis |
| Event rate, % | 14.1 vs 18.0 | 14.2 vs 9.7 | 22.0 vs 18 | 17.6 vs 11.1 |
| Hazard ratio (95 % CI) | 0.76 (0.48–1.21) | HR 1.15; 95 % CI 0.95–1.40 | NR (93.9 vs 94.5 % event free) | 0.60 (0.38–0.94]) |
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| 0.25 | - | 0.72 | 0.027 |
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| TIMI major | Hospitalisation for fatal or nonfatal bleeding | BARC major bleeding | TIMI major |
| Event rate, % | 1.4 vs 3.1 | 14.2 vs 9.7 | 10 vs 7 | 5.6 vs 3.2 |
| Hazard ratio (95 % CI) | NR | HR 1.41 (1.10–1.81) | NR (93.7 vs 95.8 event free) | 0.56 (0.25–1.27) |
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| NR | NR | 0.43 | 0.159 |
ACS acute coronary syndrome, AF atrial fibrillation, BARC Bleeding Academic Research Consortium, CI confidence interval, DAPT dual antiplatelet therapy, HR hazard ratio, MI myocardial infarction, NR not reported, OAC oral anticoagulants, PCI percutaneous coronary intervention, RCT randomised controlled trial, ST stent thrombosis, TIMI Thrombolysis in Myocardial Infarction, TT triple therapy.
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| The uninterrupted OAC without bridging approach is recommended in ACS patients on VKA [ |
| It is recommended to stop NOACs in all patients 24 h before coronary angiography, bridging is usually not needed [ |
| Standalone NOAC provides insufficient anticoagulation during catheterisation and therefore either heparin or bivalirudin (in ACS patients) should be used [ |
| When a parenteral anticoagulant is needed to support PCI in a patient at high risk of bleeding, bivalirudin should be considered as an alternative to unfractionated heparin [ |
| Radial access is the default choice for coronary angiography/intervention to minimise the risk of access site-related bleeding depending on the operator in all patients [ |
| New-generation DES (or BMS) are preferred over first-generation DES (Level of Evidence: C) |
aIncreased risk of stent thrombosis, the HEAT-PPCI trial did not show a significant difference between bivalirudin and heparin, Note: Levels of evidence following the European Society of Hypertension (EHS)/ESC guidelines classification scheme.
Level of Evidence A: Data derived from multiple randomised clinical trials or meta-analyses.
Level of Evidence B: Data derived from a single randomised trial, or nonrandomised studies.
Level of Evidence C: Only consensus opinion of experts, case studies, or standard-of-care.
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| Triple therapy is associated with an increased risk of major bleeding. Depending on bleeding risk and indication (stable coronary artery disease or ACS), triple therapy should be given for a short duration (1–6 months) followed by dual therapy (clopidogrel 75 mg/day (or alternatively, aspirin 75–100 mg/day) [ |
| Novel P2Y12 receptor inhibitors (prasugrel and ticagrelor) should not routinely be part of a triple therapy regimen (only in select cases such as stent thrombosis) (Level of Evidence: C) |
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| In a patient with AF and stable vascular disease (free of any acute ischaemic events or repeat revascularisation for > 1 year) the patient should be managed with OAC alone (whether NOAC or a VKA). (Level of Evidence: B) |