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Guided de-escalation of antiplatelet treatment in patients with acute coronary syndrome undergoing percutaneous coronary intervention (TROPICAL-ACS): a randomised, open-label, multicentre trial

Authors :
Dirk Sibbing
Dániel Aradi
Claudius Jacobshagen
Lisa Gross
Dietmar Trenk
Tobias Geisler
Martin Orban
Martin Hadamitzky
Béla Merkely
Róbert Gábor Kiss
András Komócsi
Csaba A Dézsi
Lesca Holdt
Stephan B Felix
Radoslaw Parma
Mariusz Klopotowski
Robert H G Schwinger
Johannes Rieber
Kurt Huber
Franz-Josef Neumann
Lukasz Koltowski
Julinda Mehilli
Zenon Huczek
Steffen Massberg
Zofia Parma
Maciej Lesiak
Anna Komosa
Michal Kowara
Bartosz Rymuza
Lukasz Malek
Daniel Aradi
Gábor Veress
András Döme Dézsi
Árpád Lux
Judit Papp
Andrea Kovács
Csaba András Dézsi
Sayour Amer
Zoltán Ruzsa
Szilárd Róna
Renáta Ili
Imre Ungi
Ferenc Nagy
Robert Zweiker
Gábor Tóth-Gayor
Paul Haller
Wolfgang von Scheidt
Andreas Blüthgen
Stefan Leggewie
Hans Ulrich Kreider-Stempfle
Thomas Remp
Kaffer Kara
Andreas Mügge
Alexander Wutzler
Stephan Fichtlscherer
Andreas M. Zeiher
Florian Seeger
Martin Hinterseer
Andreas König
Susanne Lederle
Frauke Czepluch
Lars Maier
Wolfgang Schillinger
Samuel Sossalla
Astrid Hummel
Stephan Felix
Mahir Karakas
Karsten Sydow
Tanja Rudolph
Marcel Halbach
Tommaso Gori
Thomas Münzel
Andreas May
Carsten-Manuel Gerstenberg
David Pilecky
Markus Deichstetter
Stefan Kääb
Anja Löw
Matthias Orban
Stefan Sattler
Sabine Deuschl
Daniel Teupser
Harald Mudra
Thomas Räder
Torsten Schütz
Felix Vahldiek
Dimitar Divchev
Hüseyin Ince
Christoph A Nienaber
Henning Radunski
Peter Boekstegers
Jan Horstkotte
Ralf Mueller
Karin Müller
Robert Schwinger
Oliver Rasp
Source :
The Lancet. 390:1747-1757
Publication Year :
2017
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2017.

Abstract

Summary Background Current guidelines recommend potent platelet inhibition with prasugrel or ticagrelor for 12 months after an acute coronary syndrome managed with percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI). However, the greatest anti-ischaemic benefit of potent antiplatelet drugs over the less potent clopidogrel occurs early, while most excess bleeding events arise during chronic treatment. Hence, a stage-adapted treatment with potent platelet inhibition in the acute phase and de-escalation to clopidogrel in the maintenance phase could be an alternative approach. We aimed to investigate the safety and efficacy of early de-escalation of antiplatelet treatment from prasugrel to clopidogrel guided by platelet function testing (PFT). Methods In this investigator-initiated, randomised, open-label, assessor-blinded, multicentre trial (TROPICAL-ACS) done at 33 sites in Europe, patients were enrolled if they had biomarker-positive acute coronary syndrome with successful PCI and a planned duration of dual antiplatelet treatment of 12 months. Enrolled patients were randomly assigned (1:1) using an internet-based randomisation procedure with a computer-generated block randomisation with stratification across study sites to either standard treatment with prasugrel for 12 months (control group) or a step-down regimen (1 week prasugrel followed by 1 week clopidogrel and PFT-guided maintenance therapy with clopidogrel or prasugrel from day 14 after hospital discharge; guided de-escalation group). The assessors were masked to the treatment allocation. The primary endpoint was net clinical benefit (cardiovascular death, myocardial infarction, stroke or bleeding grade 2 or higher according to Bleeding Academic Research Consortium [BARC]) criteria) 1 year after randomisation (non-inferiority hypothesis; margin of 30%). Analysis was intention to treat. This study is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, number NCT01959451, and EudraCT, 2013-001636-22. Findings Between Dec 2, 2013, and May 20, 2016, 2610 patients were assigned to study groups; 1304 to the guided de-escalation group and 1306 to the control group. The primary endpoint occurred in 95 patients (7%) in the guided de-escalation group and in 118 patients (9%) in the control group (p non-inferiority =0·0004; hazard ratio [HR] 0·81 [95% CI 0·62–1·06], p superiority =0·12). Despite early de-escalation, there was no increase in the combined risk of cardiovascular death, myocardial infarction, or stroke in the de-escalation group (32 patients [3%]) versus in the control group (42 patients [3%]; p non-inferiority =0·0115). There were 64 BARC 2 or higher bleeding events (5%) in the de-escalation group versus 79 events (6%) in the control group (HR 0·82 [95% CI 0·59–1·13]; p=0·23). Interpretation Guided de-escalation of antiplatelet treatment was non-inferior to standard treatment with prasugrel at 1 year after PCI in terms of net clinical benefit. Our trial shows that early de-escalation of antiplatelet treatment can be considered as an alternative approach in patients with acute coronary syndrome managed with PCI. Funding Klinikum der Universitat Munchen, Roche Diagnostics, Eli Lilly, and Daiichi Sankyo.

Details

ISSN :
01406736
Volume :
390
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Lancet
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....3da8e32d8b43c8d025c74ebb3eff4fcf
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/s0140-6736(17)32155-4