| Literature DB >> 28754568 |
Björn Redfors1, Ori Ben-Yehuda2, Sheng-Hsuan Lin3, Ariel Furer4, Ajay J Kirtane2, Bernhard Witzenbichler5, Giora Weisz6, Thomas D Stuckey7, Akiko Maehara2, Philippe Généreux8, Gennaro Giustino9, Michael J Rinaldi10, Franz-Josef Neumann11, D Christopher Metzger12, Timothy D Henry13, David A Cox14, Peter L Duffy15, Ernest L Mazzaferri16, Girma Minalu Ayele1, Roxana Mehran17, Gary S Mintz1, Gregg W Stone18.
Abstract
Patients at high risk of thrombotic events after percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) may potentially benefit from intensified antiplatelet therapy. However, more potent antiplatelet therapy would be expected to only overcome risk that is mediated by high platelet reactivity (PR). We used mediation analysis to determine the contribution of residual PR to the 2-year risk of major adverse cardiac events (MACE; the composite of cardiac death, myocardial infarction, or stent thrombosis) associated with clinical risk factors after PCI with drug-eluting stents (DES) in 8,374 patients from the prospective, multicenter Assessment of Dual AntiPlatelet Therapy with Drug-Eluting Stents (ADAPT-DES) registry. Residual PR on clopidogrel, as measured by the VerifyNow P2Y12 point-of-care assay, was included as a continuous linear mediator variable in Cox proportional hazards regression. Among 7 factors independently associated with 2-year MACE, residual PR partly mediated the effect of diabetes (13.4% attributable risk), anemia (22.9% attributable risk), and acute coronary syndromes (7.3% attributable risk). A PR-mediated effect inversely affected the MACE risk associated with smoking (10.4% attributable risk). The increased ischemic risk of chronic kidney disease, multivessel disease, and previous myocardial infarction were not mediated by residual PR. In conclusion, high residual PR mediates little or none of the increased 2-year MACE risk associated with baseline risk factors in patients treated with clopidogrel after successful PCI with DES. Intensifying antiplatelet therapy is therefore unlikely to substantially mitigate the excess ischemic risk from these variables.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28754568 DOI: 10.1016/j.amjcard.2017.06.019
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Cardiol ISSN: 0002-9149 Impact factor: 2.778