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About
Patients who suffered from acute coronary syndrome (ACS) are usually treated with a long-term dual antiplatelet therapy (DAPT) to reduce stent thrombosis and recurrent ischemic event. Nonetheless, recent important data have demonstrated the efficacy of a short term DAPT and an early single antiplatelet therapy in high bleeding and ischemic risk patients.
The bleeding risk is associated with a significant mortality. This risk is especially high in patients treated with potent P2Y12 inhibitors like ticagrelor or prasugrel after an ACS.
As a result of the abounding data regarding the safety of an early single antiplatelet therapy with high potency antiplatelet therapy (ticagrelor or prasugrel), it is likely that such strategy will soon be implemented in the guidelines.
The benefits of these high-potency P2Y12 inhibitors over clopidogrel mostly occur in patients with genetic polymorphisms of CYP2Y12 associated with a loss of function in clopidogrel metabolism.
Furthermore, the anti-ischemic benefit of potent P2Y12 inhibitors over clopidogrel occurs early, while excess bleeding events often arise during chronic treatment.
Our hypothesis is that a systematic and rapid genetic screening of CYP2C90 *2 or *17 polymorphism to guide an early single therapy with low potency antiplatelet (aspirin or clopidogrel) could lead to less bleeding events with a consistent efficacy towards cardiac events compared with high potency antiplatelet therapies (prasugrel or ticagrelor) in high bleeding risk patients treated for ACS.
Full description
Multicenter, randomized, open label trial using the PROBE study design. Randomization 1 to 3 months (preferably 1, considering the HBR) after ACS into 2 parallel arms. Stratification: according to revascularization status (PCI or no PCI), genotype (loss of function, fast metabolization, none) and center.
Control arm: stop aspirin for a single antiplatelet therapy with a high-potency antiplatelet (ticagrelor or prasugrel).
Intervention arm: single-antiplatelet with a low-potency antiplatelet (aspirin or clopidogrel) guided by genetic testing.
Enrollment
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Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
Being 18-year-old or older
Admission for type 1 acute myocardial infarction (STEMI or NSTEMI)
Bedside genetic testing for clopidogrel resistance that can be performed during hospital stay for ACS (oral swab kit with result within 1 hour)
Treated with aspirin and ticagrelor, or aspirin and prasugrel at the screening phase and at the randomization visit.
High bleeding risk as defined below (criteria adapted from the Consensus Document From the Academic Research Consortium for High Bleeding Risk) (at least one criterion) :
patient affiliated to a social security system
signed informed consent form
Women of childbearing capacity with effective contraception for the duration of the research OR man, OR woman not of childbearing capacity
Exclusion criteria
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
2,468 participants in 2 patient groups
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Central trial contact
Michel ZEITOUNI, MD,PhD; Delphine BRUGIER, PhD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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