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Circ Cardiovasc Interv · Aug 2017
Clinical TrialImpact of Timing on the Functional Recovery Achieved With Platelet Supplementation After Treatment With Ticagrelor.
- M Urooj Zafar, Donald A Smith, Usman Baber, Samantha Sartori, Kevin Chen, David W Lam, Carlos A Linares-Koloffon, Juan Rey-Mendoza, Gustavo Jimenez Britez, Gines Escolar, Valentin Fuster, and Juan J Badimon.
- From the Cardiovascular Institute, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York, NY (M.U.Z., D.A.S., U.B., S.S., K.C., D.W.L., C.A.L.-K., J.R.-M., G.J.B., V.F., J.J.B.); and Department of Hematopathology, Hospital Clinic, Barcelona, Spain (G.E.).
- Circ Cardiovasc Interv. 2017 Aug 1; 10 (8).
BackgroundAmerican College of Cardiology/American Heart Association guidelines advise waiting 5 to 7 days before operating on P2Y12 inhibitor-treated acute coronary syndrome patients, to allow dissipation of its antiplatelet effects. Platelet transfusion is often used to restore hemostasis during operations, but its effectiveness and optimal timing are unclear. We investigated the degree of functional gains obtained from platelet supplementation after loading and maintenance of dual antiplatelet therapy with ticagrelor and the influence of timing on this strategy.Methods And ResultsAfter baseline platelet testing (Multiplate Analyzer and VerifyNow), cardiovascular disease patients (n=20; 56.9±7.9 years; 65% men; 75% diabetic) received dual antiplatelet therapy as a single loading dose (ticagrelor 180 mg plus aspirin 325 mg) and as daily/maintenance treatment for 5 to 7 days (maintenance therapy: ticagrelor 90 mg BID plus aspirin 81 mg QD). At 4, 6, 24, and 48 hours from (last) dosing, patients' blood samples were supplemented with concentrated platelets from healthy donors in vitro, raising platelet counts by 0% (unsupplemented control), 25%, 50%, and 75%, and the function retested. Reactivity in supplemented samples was compared with respective 0% sample and with the pretreatment baseline. Results under loading dose and maintenance therapy regimens were nearly identical. Platelet reactivity was higher (P<0.05) in nearly all supplemented samples versus respective controls. Aggregations with supplementation were 59% to 79% of baseline at 24 hours and equal to baseline at 48 hours.ConclusionsPlatelet reactivity of ticagrelor-treated patients can be restored using concentrated platelets after a loading dose/maintenance therapy in a time-dependent manner under in vitro testing. Although statistically significant improvements are evident 6 hours after (last) dosing, ≥24 hours maybe needed for clinically meaningful restoration in platelet function.Clinical Trial RegistrationURL: https://clinicaltrials.gov. Unique identifier: NCT02201394.© 2017 American Heart Association, Inc.
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