| Literature DB >> 29121979 |
Sarah Baos1, Wendy Underwood1, Lucy Culliford1, Barnaby C Reeves1, Chris A Rogers1, Ruth Bowles2, Tom Johnson2, Andreas Baumbach2, Andrew Mumford3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Dual antiplatelet therapy (DAPT) with aspirin (ASP) and a P2Y12 blocker is currently standard care after percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) with stent insertion, and aims to inhibit platelet function in order to prevent stent thrombosis. The P2Y12 blocker ticagrelor (TIC) has greater antiplatelet effect than the previously used members of this class, such as clopidogrel. In healthy volunteers, TIC is sufficient to cause strong platelet inhibition, with little additional effect from ASP. Omission of ASP may improve the safety of antiplatelet regimes by reducing bleeding. However, the effect of single antiplatelet treatment with TIC, compared to DAPT with TIC + ASP, has not been studied in detail in patients with coronary artery disease.Entities:
Keywords: Antiplatelet therapy; Aspirin; Clopidogrel; Haematology; P2Y12 blocker; Platelet function; Prasugrel; Ticagrelor
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29121979 PMCID: PMC5680755 DOI: 10.1186/s13063-017-2277-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Trials ISSN: 1745-6215 Impact factor: 2.279
Fig. 1Trial schema. Schema showing the recruitment pathway with the number of patients to be recruited, anticipated eligibility, recruitment and follow-up rates. ASP aspirin, CLOP clopidogrel, TIC ticagrelor
Fig. 2Schedule of data collection (SPIRIT)
Bleeding Academic Research Consortium (BARC) definitions
| Class | Definition |
|---|---|
| Type 0 | No bleeding. |
| Type 1 | Bleeding that is not actionable and does not cause the patient to seek unscheduled performance of studies, hospitalisation, or treatment by a healthcare professional; may include episodes leading to self-discontinuation of medical therapy by the patient without consulting a healthcare professional. |
| Type 2 | Any overt, actionable sign of haemorrhage (e.g. more bleeding than would be expected for a clinical circumstance, including bleeding found by imaging alone) that does not fit the criteria for type 3, 4, or 5 but does meet at least one of the following criteria: requiring nonsurgical, medical intervention by a healthcare professional, leading to hospitalisation or increased level of care, prompting evaluation. |
| Type 3a | Overt bleeding plus haemoglobin drop of 3 to < 5 g/dL, corrected for transfusion (provided haemoglobin drop is related to bleed) OR any transfusion with overt bleeding. |
| Type 3b | Overt bleeding plus haemoglobin drop < 5 g/dL, corrected for transfusion (provided haemoglobin drop is related to bleed) OR cardiac tamponade. Bleeding requiring surgical intervention for control (excluding dental/nasal/skin/haemorrhoid) OR bleeding requiring intravenous vasoactive agents. |
| Type 3c | Intracranial haemorrhage (does not include microbleeds or haemorrhagic transformation, does include intraspinal) Subcategories confirmed by autopsy or imaging or lumbar puncture OR intraocular bleed compromising vision. |
| Type 4 | Coronary artery bypass graft (CABG)-related bleeding OR perioperative intracranial bleeding within 48 h OR reoperation after closure of sternotomy for the purpose of controlling bleeding OR transfusion of ≥ 5 U whole blood or packed red blood cells within a 48 h period (cell saver product are not included) OR chest tube output ≥ 2 L within a 24-h period.* |
| Type 5a | Probable fatal bleeding; no autopsy or imaging confirmation but clinically suspicious. |
| Type 5b | Definite fatal bleeding; overt bleeding or autopsy or imaging confirmation |
*If a CABG-related bleed is not adjudicated as at least a type 3 severity event, it will be classified as not a bleeding event. If a bleeding event occurs with a clear temporal relationship to CABG (i.e. within a 48-h time frame) but does not meet type 4 severity criteria, it will be classified as not a bleeding event