Status and phase
Conditions
Treatments
Study type
Funder types
Identifiers
About
The goal of this clinical trial is to learn if reducing the duration of dual antiplatelet therapy (DAPT) after percutaneous coronary intervention (short treatment regimen, stopping aspirin at day 7) is as safe and efficient as the standard DAPT duration (standard treatment regimen) in elderly patients ≥ 65 years.
The main questions it aims to answer are:
Does the reduction of the duration of DAPT reduces rates of bleeding without increasing the risk of cardiovascular events? Researchers will compare a short treatment by DAPT (7 days, followed by single antiplatelet therapy) to a standard treatment duration by DAPT (3 to 12 months) after successful percutaneous coronary intervention with ≥ 1 drug-eluting stent.
Participants will:
Full description
While dual antiplatelet therapy (DAPT) is the cornerstone of medical therapy after percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI), its optimal duration is still under debate. DAPT reduces the incidence of thrombotic events but exposes patients to an increased risk of bleeding strongly associated with mortality. Older age is a known predictor of bleeding risk. In the elderly, the duration of DAPT appears to be the most relevant modifiable risk factor.
Bleeding consequences triggered investigations into a further reduction in DAPT duration with the use of the newer generation drug-eluting stent (DES) but none specifically focused on elderly patients. Single antiplatelet therapy (SAPT) using a P2Y12 inhibitor after a short period of DAPT (between 1 and 3 months) has been recently tested in some studies. A meta-analysis focusing on the elderly subgroups (with cut-offs ranging between 65 and 75 years-old) showed similar rates of major bleeding and the composite ischemic endpoint but with a high level of heterogeneity highlighting the need of specific studies in this particular population. A recent large study, including a large proportion of patients ≥ 75 years and comparing SAPT after 1 month of DAPT to DAPT ≥ 3 months, showed a lower incidence of major bleedings while net adverse clinical events and major adverse cardiac events remain non-inferior. In the presence of strong P2Y12 receptor blockade, aspirin provides little additional inhibition of platelet aggregation and inhibition of hemostatic system activation has been reported to be comparable between P2Y12 inhibitor monotherapy and DAPT in healthy subjects. The low thrombogenicity of new coronary devices, potent platelet inhibition with new P2Y12 inhibitors in monotherapy and the potential life-threatening consequences of bleeding which occur mostly in the weeks following PCI support the idea of very short DAPT after PCI in elderly.
The investigators propose a multi-center randomized study to compare the safety and efficacy of very short versus standard-duration DAPT after PCI with DES in elderly patients. The investigators aim to determine whether short DAPT (for 7 days after randomization) followed by SAPT with P2Y12 inhibitor is non inferior to standard-duration DAPT regarding net clinical benefit (a composite of all-cause death, myocardial infarction, stroke, and major bleeding defined by Bleeding Academic Research Consortium (BARC) 3 or 5) at 1 year in elderly patients undergoing PCI for acute or chronic coronary syndrome.
The investigators hypothesized that the very short strategy will be non-inferior to the standard-duration strategy. The very short strategy may allow to further reduce bleedings while maintaining the ischemic risk and may consequently become the default strategy.
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
Exclusion criteria
PCI without drug-eluting stent implantation or with a bioresorbable scaffold
Planned coronary artery bypass grafting or cardiac surgery
Any planned surgery within 12 months unless intended antiplatelet therapy could be maintained throughout the peri-surgical period
Index PCI for stent thrombosis or chronic total occlusion
Need for oral anticoagulation therapy
Known hypersensitivity or allergy to aspirin, clopidogrel, ticagrelor or prasugrel
Use of fibrinolytic therapy within 24 hours of PCI
Severe renal insufficiency (MDRD creatinine clearance < 30 ml/min/m2) and/or dialysis
Increased bleeding risk (prior hemorrhagic stroke; stroke < 30 days; brain injury<6 months; history of intracranial tumor or intracranial hemorrhage; internal bleeding<6 weeks; active bleeding; anemia (hemoglobin ≤ 8 g/dl) or thrombocytopenia (platelets < 100 000 G/L); major surgery<3 weeks)
increased thrombotic risk related to the patient (previous stent thrombosis, ≥ 2 previous myocardial infarction, symptomatic peripheral artery disease, chronic systemic inflammatory disease treated with corticoids or immunosuppressive drug) or the procedure (left main treated, ≥3 stents/treated lesions, total length of stents>60mm, bifurcation lesion with stents in each branch, stenting of the last patent vessel)
Life expectancy less than 1 year
Participation in another interventional trial
Patients considered as vulnerable by the investigators because of medical, psychological or social conditions:
patients with poor quality of the downstream territory with diffuse distal coronary disease
women of childbearing potential: non menopaused -with no menses for 12 months without an alternative medical cause- and not permanently sterilized -hysterectomy, bilateral salpingectomy or bilateral oophorectomy-
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
1,700 participants in 2 patient groups
Loading...
Central trial contact
Vincent ROULE, MD, PhD; Elsa LE BLANC, PhD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
Clinical trials
Research sites
Resources
Legal