| Literature DB >> 30238704 |
Danny Kupka1,2, Dirk Sibbing1,3.
Abstract
Dual antiplatelet therapy (DAPT) - a combination of a P2Y₁₂ receptor inhibitor and aspirin - has revolutionized antithrombotic treatment. Potent P2Y₁₂ inhibitors such as prasugrel and ticagrelor exhibit a strong and more consistent platelet inhibition when compared to clopidogrel. Therefore, ticagrelor and prasugrel significantly reduce ischemic events, but at an expense of an increased bleeding risk in acute coronary syndrome (ACS) patients undergoing percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI). These observations have engaged intensive clinical research in alternative DAPT regimens to achieve sufficient platelet inhibition with an acceptable bleeding risk. Our review focusses on P2Y₁₂ receptor therapy de-escalation defined as a switch from a potent antiplatelet agent (ticagrelor or prasugrel) to clopidogrel. Recently, both unguided (platelet function testing independent) and guided (platelet function testing dependent) DAPT de-escalation strategies have been investigated in different clinical studies and both switching strategies could be possible options to prevent bleeding complications without increasing ischemic risk. In light of the still limited data currently available, future large-scale trials should accumulate more data on various DAPT de-escalation regimens with both ticagrelor and prasugrel in unguided and guided de-escalation approaches. In the current review we aim at summarizing and discussing the current evidence on this still emerging topic in the field of antiplatelet treatment.Entities:
Keywords: Acute coronary syndrome; DAPT de-escalation; P2Y₁₂ Inhibitors
Year: 2018 PMID: 30238704 PMCID: PMC6158449 DOI: 10.4070/kcj.2018.0255
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Korean Circ J ISSN: 1738-5520 Impact factor: 3.243
Figure 1Timing of ischemic versus bleeding events after PCI. Ischemic and bleeding rates after PCI are displayed dependent on time. Whereas ischemic rates reach a plateau during the first month, bleeding rates steadily decline. In the second month, ischemic events substantially decrease resulting in an exuberant bleeding risk in the later phase post-PCI.
PCI = percutaneous coronary intervention.
Figure 2The Pros and Cons of DAPT de-escalation. Characteristics marked in red are variables that may favor a DAPT de-escalation approach and variables marked in blue could be considered as factors that argue against DAPT de-escalation as an alternative DAPT strategy after PCI. Part of the figure content and variables are adapted from the ESC 2017 DAPT guidelines12).
DAPT = dual antiplatelet therapy, PCI = percutaneous coronary intervention.
Studies on P2Y12 receptor inhibitor de-escalation
| Study (acronym) | Approach | P2Y12 receptor inhibitors | No. of patients and study design | Key results | Ref. | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| TROPICAL-ACS | Effect of PFT-guided de-escalation in PCI-treated patients | Prasugrel | 2,610 ACS patients | Primary endpoint (control vs. PFT-guided de-escalation): Net clinical benefit of CV death, MI, stroke, BARC bleeding ≥2 (9% vs. 7%; HR, 0.81; 95% CI, 0.62–1.06; p=0.0004) | ||
| Clopidogrel | RCT | Subgroup analysis (escalation vs. de-escalation) | ||||
| - CV death, MI, stroke (3% vs. 3%; p=0.0115) | ||||||
| - BARC bleeding events ≥2 (6% vs. 5%; HR, 0.82; 95% CI, 0.59–1.13; p=0.23) | ||||||
| TOPIC | Effect of unguided de-escalation in PCI-treated patients | Ticagrelor | 646 ACS patients | Primary endpoint: (control vs. unguided de-escalation): CV death, urgent revascularization, stroke, BARC bleeding ≥2 (26.3% vs. 13.7%; HR, 0.48; 95% CI, 0.34–0.68; p<0.01) | ||
| Prasugrel | RCT | |||||
| Clopidogrel | ||||||
| SCOPE | Investigate the incidence of switching P2Y12 blocker and its safety in ACS patients with PCI | Ticagrelor | 1,363 ACS patients | Primary endpoint: MACE (1.6%) and NACE (5.6%) | ||
| Prasugrel | Observational study | Switching rate: cath lab (2.3%), discharge (3.3%), follow-up (5.2%) | ||||
| Clopidogrel | Subgroup analysis (escalation vs. de-escalation) | |||||
| -Patients with escalation: no NACE occurred among patients receiving an escalation (escalation vs. de-escalation: OR, 25.2; 95% CI, 1.4–242.9; p=0.02) | ||||||
| -Patients with de-escalation: NACE increased (OR, 5.3; CI, 2.1–18.2; p=0.04) | ||||||
| TRANSLATE ACS | Investigation of post-discharge P2Y12 receptor blocker switching | Ticagrelor Prasugrel | 12,365 MI patients | Primary endpoint: MACE, factors for ADP receptor inhibitor choice | ||
| Clopidogrel | Observational study | Switching rate: overall 7.6% | ||||
| Switch in P2Y12 inhibitor groups: ticagrelor (28.3%), prasugrel (15.4%), clopidogrel (3.6%) | ||||||
| Main reasons for switching: costs (40.3%), physicians decision (60.7%) | ||||||
| PRAGUE-18 | Evaluate treatment of ticagrelor versus prasugrel in patients with STEMI undergoing PCI | Prasugrel | 1,230 MI patients | Primary endpoint (prasugrel vs. ticagrelor): CV death, MI, stroke, all-cause mortality, definite stent thrombosis (HR, 1.167; 95% CI, 0.742–1.835; p=0.503), all bleeding (10.9% vs. 11.1%; p=0.999), TIMI major bleeding (6.6% vs. 5.7%, p=0.754) | ||
| Ticagrelor | RCT | Switching rate: economic (39%), anticoagulation (3.2%), adverse events (4.5%), other 6.8% | ||||
Studies addressing issues of P2Y12 inhibitor switching are described by approach, study design and key results. TROPICAL ACS and TOPIC are randomized controlled trials, whereas SCOPE and TRANSLATE ACS are observational studies on outcomes after switching. PRAGUE-18 was not intended to address P2Y12 switching. This post-hoc analysis analyzes DAPT switching one year after randomization.
ACS = acute coronary syndrome; ADP = adenosine diphosphate; BARC = bleeding academic research consortium; CABG = coronary artery bypass grafting; CI = confidence interval; CV = cardiovascular; HR = hazard ratio; MACE = major adverse cardiac events; MI = myocardial infarction; NACE = net adverse cerebrovascular events (combination of MACE and bleeding events); NNT = number needed to treat; PCI = percutaneous coronary intervention; PFT = platelet function testing; PRAGUE-18 = Comparison of Prasugrel and Ticagrelor in the Treatment of Acute Myocardial Infarction; RCT = randomized controlled trial; SCOPE = Switching From Clopidogrel to New Oral Antiplatelet Agents During Percutaneous Coronary Intervention; TIMI = thrombolysis in myocardial infarction; TROPICAL-ACS = Testing Responsiveness to Platelet Inhibition on Chronic Antiplatelet Treatment for Acute Coronary Syndrome.
Figure 3Trials and possible strategies for un-guided and guided DAPT de-escalation. The figure shows studies and strategies on DAPT de-escalation approaches for P2Y12 receptor therapy. (A) Guided de-escalation of DAPT investigated in the TROPICAL-ACS trial. Patients were enrolled if they had biomarker-positive acute coronary syndrome with successful PCI and randomly assign to a PFT-based DAPT de-escalation arm or uniform prasugrel treatment. (B) Unguided DAPT de-escalation investigated in the TOPIC trial. Patients with ACS and undergoing coronary intervention, on aspirin and a potent P2Y12 blocker were randomly assigned to switch to aspirin and clopidogrel or continuation of their drug regimen with a potent P2Y12 inhibitor.
ACS = acute coronary syndrome, DAPT = dual antiplatelet therapy, PFT = platelet function testing; TOPIC = timing of optimal platelet inhibition after acute coronary syndrome; TROPICAL-ACS = Testing Responsiveness to Platelet Inhibition on Chronic Antiplatelet Treatment for Acute Coronary Syndrome.