| Literature DB >> 28824788 |
Pahul Singh1, Yenal Harper1, Carrie S Oliphant1, Mohamed Morsy1, Michelle Skelton1, Raza Askari1, Rami N Khouzam1.
Abstract
Peripheral arterial disease (PAD) is a common disorder associated with a high risk of cardiovascular mortality and continues to be under-recognized. The major risk factors for PAD are similar to those for coronary and cerebrovascular disease. Management includes exercise program, pharmacologic therapy and revascularization including endovascular and surgical approach. The optimal revascularization strategy, endovascular or surgical intervention, is often debated due to the paucity of head to head randomized controlled studies. Despite significant advances in endovascular interventions resulting in increased utilization over surgical bypass, significant challenges still remain. Platelet activation and aggregation after percutaneous transluminal angioplasty of atherosclerotic arteries are important risk factors for re-occlusion/restenosis and life-threatening thrombosis following endovascular procedures. Antiplatelet agents are commonly prescribed to reduce the risk of myocardial infarction, stroke and death from cardiovascular causes in patients with PAD. Despite an abundance of data demonstrating efficacy of antiplatelet therapy in coronary artery disease and cerebrovascular disease, there is a paucity of clinical information, clinical guidelines and randomized controlled studies in the PAD population. Hence, data on antiplatelet therapy in coronary interventions is frequently extrapolated to peripheral interventions. The aim of this review article is to elucidate the current data on revascularization and the role and duration of antiplatelet and anticoagulant therapy in re-vascularized lower limb PAD patients.Entities:
Keywords: Antiplatelet therapy; Peripheral arterial disease; Peripheral vascular disease; Revascularization
Year: 2017 PMID: 28824788 PMCID: PMC5545142 DOI: 10.4330/wjc.v9.i7.583
Source DB: PubMed Journal: World J Cardiol
Results of clinical trials initially designed for patients with coronary artery disease, with subgroup analysis in peripheral arterial disease
| PEGASUS TIMI-54 subgroup analysis[ | 1143 | CAD and concomitant PAD | Ticagrelor 90 mg BID + aspirin | Cardiovascular death, MI and stroke Acute limb ischemia and peripheral revascularization for ischemia | 15.2% in ticagrelor (pooled group) and 19.3% in placebo. ARR 4.1% in ticagrelor (pooled group) 60 mg dose more beneficial (ARR of 5.2%) 0.46% in ticagrelor (pooled group) and 0.71% in placebo (HR 0.65; 95%CI: 0.44-0.95; |
| PLATO-subgroup analysis[ | 1144 | CAD and concomitant PAD | Ticagrelor | Cardiovascular death, MI and stroke | 18% in ticagrelor group and 20.6% in clopidogrel group (HR: 0.85; 95%CI: 0.64–1.11; |
| TRA 2P-TIMI 50[ | 26449 | Previous history of MI or ischemic stroke within the previous 2 wk-12 mo or PAD | Vorapaxar | Cardiovascular death, MI, and stroke | 9.3% in vorapaxar group and 10.5% in placebo ( |
| CHARISMA[ | 15603 | Patients with either clinically documented vascular disease or risk factors for atherothrombotic disease | Aspirin plus clopidogrel | MI, stroke or cardiovascular death | 6.8% in clopidogrel plus aspirin group and 7.3% in aspirin group ( |
| CAPRIE[ | 19185 | Recent MI, recent ischemic stroke or symptomatic PAD | Aspirin | MI, stroke and vascular death | RRR of 8.7% clopidogrel group ( |
MI: Myocardial infarction; PAD: Peripheral arterial disease; ARR: Absolute risk reduction; RRR: Relative risk reduction.
Results of clinical trials designed for patients with peripheral arterial disease
| COMPASS[ | 27402 | Peripheral arterial disease or coronary artery disease | Rivaroxaban plus aspirin or rivaroxaban alone | Myocardial infarction, stroke, CV death and the time from randomization to the first occurrence of major bleeding | Preliminary results: Trial stopped prematurely. One of rivaroxaban arms proved to be superior to aspirin alone No disclosed information on the primary bleeding endpoint or the regimen that showed superiority to aspirin alone |
| EUCLID[ | 13885 | PAD (ABI ≤ 0.80 or prior (> 30 d) revascularization of the lower extremities) | Ticagrelor | CV death, MI, or ischemic stroke | 10.8% in ticagrelor group |
| MIRROR[ | 80 | PAD treated with endovascular therapy | Dual antiplatelet therapy (aspirin plus clopidogrel) | Local concentrations of platelet activation markers β-thromboglobulin and CD40L | Reduced peri-interventional platelet activation and improved functional outcome in the dual antiplatelet therapy group |
| Berger et al[ | 5269 | PAD (patients with claudication, those undergoing percutaneous intervention or bypass surgery, and asymptomatic patients with an ABI of 0.99 or less) | Aspirin or combination of aspirin plus dipyridamole | Composite end point of non-fatal MI, nonfatal stroke, and CV death | 8.9% in aspirin or combination of aspirin and dipyridamole, 11% in placebo (95%CI: 0.76-1.04) |
| WAVE[ | 2161 | PAD (atherosclerosis of the arteries of lower extremities, carotid arteries or subclavian arteries) | Antiplatelet agent plus oral anticoagulant | CV death, MI and stroke | 12.2% in combination therapy group and 13.3% in antiplatelet therapy alone (95%CI: 0.73 to 1.16; |
| Thompson et al[ | 2702 | PAD (stable, moderate to severe claudication) | Cilostazol | MWD, pain free walking distance | MWD: 44% and 50% (cilostazol 50 mg and 100 mg respectively) and 21.4% in placebo ( |
| BOA[ | 2690 | Patients undergone infra-inguinal bypass surgery | Warfarin | Graft occlusion | No observed difference in warfarin compared to aspirin (HR = 0.95; 95%CI: 0.82-1.11) |
ABI: Ankle brachial index; CV: Cardiovascular; HR: Hazard ratio; MI: Myocardial infarction; MWD: Mean walking distance.
Current available guidelines addressing antiplatelet therapy for peripheral arterial disease
| Class Ia | Aspirin in daily doses of 75 to 325 mg or clopidogrel 75 mg/d is recommended to reduce the risk of MI, stroke, or vascular death in individuals with symptomatic atherosclerotic lower extremity PAD |
| Class IIa | Antiplatelet therapy is reasonable to manage asymptomatic individuals with an ABI less than or equal to 0.90 to reduce the risk of MI, stroke, or vascular death |
| Class IIb | Dual-antiplatelet therapy (aspirin and clopidogrel) may be reasonable to reduce the risk of limb-related events in patients with symptomatic PAD after lower extremity revascularization |
PAD: Peripheral arterial disease; MI: Myocardial infarction.