| Literature DB >> 26450578 |
Pravesh Kumar Bundhun1, Tao Qin2, Meng-Hua Chen3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Since antiplatelet therapy in type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) patients is very important after intracoronary stenting, and because the most commonly used therapies have been the dual antiplatelet therapy (DAPT) consisting of aspirin and clopidogrel and the triple antiplatelet therapy (TAPT) consisting of aspirin, clopidogrel and cilostazol, we aim to compare the effectiveness and safety between triple antiplatelet therapy and dual antiplatelet therapy in T2DM patients.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26450578 PMCID: PMC4599328 DOI: 10.1186/s12872-015-0114-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Cardiovasc Disord ISSN: 1471-2261 Impact factor: 2.298
Abbreviations and acronyms
| T2DM | Type 2 diabetes mellitus |
| PCI | Percutaneous coronary intervention |
| DAPT | Dual antiplatelet therapy |
| TAPT | Triple antiplatelet therapy |
| TVR | Target vessel revascularization |
| TLR | Target lumen revascularization |
| MACEs | Major adverse cardiac effects |
| PRI | Platelet reactivity index |
| WMD | Weight mean difference |
Fig. 1Flow diagram for the study selection. One thousand five hundred eighty six articles were identified from PubMed, Embase/Science Direct, CNKI, Wanfang and Cochrane databases. After considering the inclusion and exclusion criteria, finally 8 RCTs were selected and included in this meta-analysis. Showing the detailed flow chart of study selection
Shows the endpoints reported by each of the included trials
| Trials | No of patients (DAPT + TAPT) | Follow up period (month) | Reported endpoints/outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Han 2009 [ | 263 | 12 | MACEs, TVR, and ADR. |
| Lee 2011 [ | 176 | 12 | MACEs, TVR, TLR, ST, D/MI/TVR, BL and ADR. |
| Lee 2008 [ | 400 | 9 | MACEs, TVR, TLR, ST, D/MI/TVR, BL and ADR. |
| Lee 2007 [ | 166 | 9 | MACEs, TVR, TLR, ST, D/MI/TVR, BL and ADR. |
| Yang 2011 [ | 154 | – | PRU and PA |
| Yang 2007 [ | 55 | 7 | PA |
| Capranzano 2012 [ | 80 | 1 | PRU and PRI |
| Angiolillo 2008 [ | 40 | 1 | PRI and PA |
| Angiolillo 2011 [ | 106 | 1 | PRI |
| Ha 2013 [ | 84 | 2 | PRU and PA |
Abbreviations: MACEs major adverse cardiac effects, TVR target vessel revascularization, TLR target lesion revascularization, BL bleeding, ST stent thrombosis, ADR adverse drug reactions, D death, MI myocardial infarction, PA platelet aggregation, PRI platelet reactivity index, PRU platelet reactivity unit
Baseline characteristics of patients from the included studies
| Study/Year | Age (yrs) | Male (%) | Ht (%) | Hc (%) | Cs (%) | Qa |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| T/D | T/D | T/D | T/D | T/D | ||
| Lee 2007 [ | 60.9/61.2 | 64.8/63.6 | 54.8/55.2 | 30.0/28.4 | 37.6/37.2 | B |
| Lee 2008 [ | 61.0/60.7 | 59.0/57.0 | 59.5/59.5 | 30.5/28.5 | 24.0/31.5 | B |
| Yang 2011 [ | 63.5/63.5 | 62.3/62.3 | 55.8/55.8 | 37.7/37.7 | 28.6/28.6 | B |
| Yang 2009 [ | 63.4/63.8 | 40.0/60.0 | 61.9/57.1 | 28.6/41.2 | 14.3/20.6 | B |
| Capranzano 2012 [ | 60.4/60.4 | 60.2/60.2 | 91.2/91.2 | 97.0/97.0 | 37.1/37.1 | B |
| Angiolillo 2008 [ | 64.0/64.0 | 60.0/60.0 | 96.0/96.0 | 92.0/92.0 | 24.0/24.0 | B |
| Angiolillo 2011 [ | 60.5/60.5 | 63.0/63.0 | 95.0/95.0 | 100.0/100.0 | 28.0/28.0 | B |
| Ha 2013 [ | 64.9/62.3 | 67.7/76.1 | 71.4/76.1 | 33.3/42.5 | 23.8/23.8 | B |
| Lee 2011 [ | 60.9/62.1 | 70.0/71.5 | 58.4/64.7 | 42.4/45.0 | 30.4/30.1 | B |
| Han 2009 [ | 59.6/60.2 | 73.8/72.9 | 57.9/56.1 | 45.5/45.4 | – | B |
Abbreviations:NM not mentioned, Ht hypertension, Hc hypercholesterolemia; Cs current smoker, T triple therapy, D dual therapy
aQuality scale: A:true randomization and allocation concealed; B:process of randomization not given and concealment of allocation unclear
Shows the mean Quantitative Angiographic Measurement of the included studiesa
| Variables (mm) | TAPT group ( | DAPT group ( |
|---|---|---|
| Reference diameter | 2.81 | 2.79 |
| Lesion length | 31.5 | 31.7 |
| Stented length | 37.45 | 36.05 |
| Minimal lumen diameter in segment before procedure | 0.81 | 0.79 |
| Minimal lumen diameter in segment after procedure | 2.25 | 2.24 |
| Minimal lumen diameter in stent after procedure | 2.57 | 2.58 |
| Stenosis diameter in segment before procedure (%) | 70.3 | 70.4 |
| Stenosis diameter in segment after procedure (%) | 17.7 | 17.2 |
| Stenosis diameter in stent after procedure (%) | 8.45 | 7.57 |
| Acute gain in segment | 1.44 | 1.46 |
| Acute gain in stent | 1.76 | 1.79 |
aData from trials Lee 2007 [34], Lee 2008 [5] and Lee 2011 [33] have been included in this table. Quantitative Angiographic Measurement data for study Han 2009 [6] was not available and therefore have been omitted
Fig. 2Forest plot comparing the adverse clinical outcomes between TAPT and DAPT in T2DM patients after intracoronary stenting. Adverse clinical outcomes have decreased with the use of this TAPT during a follow up period of 9 to 12 months after coronary stenting
Fig. 3Forest plot comparing the platelet activities between TAPT and DAPT in T2DM after intracoronary stenting. A lower platelet aggregation, platelet reactivity index and platelet reactivity unit in the TAPT group shows that TAPT seems to be more effective in these T2DM patients
Fig. 4Forest plot comparing the adverse drug reactions between TAPT and DAPT in T2DM patients after intracoronary stenting. More adverse effects are associated with cilostazol use in this TAPT compared to DAPT in these T2DM patients
Fig. 5a and b Funnel plots assessing publication bias in the included studies. For all of the above analyses, sensitivity analyses yielded consistent results. Based on a visual inspection of the funnel plots, there has been no evidence of publication bias for the included studies that assessed all clinical end points