Status and phase
Conditions
Treatments
About
The study is going to compare two different doses of aspirin for the treatment of heart disease in combination with the anticlotting medication ticagrelor. One of these doses of aspirin, 75 milligrams (mg) once a day, is the current standard treatment dose of aspirin used to treat heart attacks and angina. The other, 20 mg twice a day, is lower than the standard but there is growing scientific evidence that, when given with ticagrelor, this might offer advantages over the usual dose.
Full description
Aspirin has an established role in the treatment of ACS and secondary prevention of ischaemic heart disease. In the landmark trial of aspirin in ACS, ISIS-2 (1988), it conferred a benefit of similar magnitude to thrombolysis. The addition of a second antiplatelet agent (a P2Y12 inhibitor) to aspirin is known to improve outcomes in both NSTE-ACS (Yusuf, Zhao et al. 2001) and STEMI (Chen, Jiang et al. 2005, Sabatine, Cannon et al. 2005). There are 2 major classes of oral P2Y12 inhibitor: irreversibly binding thienopyridine agents, such as clopidogrel or prasugrel, and reversibly-binding drugs, such as the cyclo-pentyl triazolopyrimidine ticagrelor.
A combination of aspirin and ticagrelor 90 milligrams (mg) twice daily for at least 1 year represents the current standard treatment for ACS recommended in European guidelines (Steg, James et al. 2012, Roffi, Patrono et al. 2015).
Aspirin inhibits cyclo-oxygenase (COX) enzymes by irreversible acetylation, and at lower doses exhibits relative selectivity for COX1, responsible for the synthesis of thromboxane A2 (TXA2), which is a pro-thrombotic and vasoconstrictive eicosanoid. At higher doses, aspirin is also able to inhibit COX2, leading to a reduction in release of the anti-thrombotic and vasodilatory compound prostacyclin (PGI2). Aspirin is able to inhibit platelet aggregation, therefore, by inhibiting TXA2 relatively more than PGI2. Due to its irreversible binding, COX is inhibited in platelets for their lifespan (typically 10-12 days) as, being without a nucleus, they cannot regenerate the enzyme (Patrono 1994). It is now thought that PGI2 acts locally rather than systemically and, in healthy individuals, COX1 may be responsible for the majority of PGI2 production (Kirkby, Lundberg et al. 2012). In patients with atheromatous disease, however, there is greater COX2 expression in diseased vessel walls (Schonbeck, Sukhova et al. 1999) therefore this may not apply in the areas most vulnerable to thrombosis. COX2 selective inhibitors have been associated with increased cardiovascular risk and this appears to be both a dose dependent and class effect (Mukherjee, Nissen et al. 2001, Bhala, Emberson et al. 2013).
All antithrombotic drugs confer a risk of bleeding. In addition to its antiplatelet effect, COX1 inhibition by aspirin in the stomach can lead to acid-induced inflammation and ulceration, resulting in bleeding. There is evidence that lower doses of aspirin are associated with lower rates of gastrointestinal bleeding (Valkhoff, Sturkenboom et al. 2012) including when combined with a P2Y12 inhibitor (Mehta, Tanguay et al. 2010).
In the UK, 75 mg od is the standard maintenance dose of aspirin and the consensus from the Antithrombotic Trialist Collaborators was that higher doses offer no added benefit and may increase complication rates when used for secondary prevention (2002). Use of this specific dose stems from its original formulation as an anti-inflammatory dose for paediatric use, and was chosen to approximate 1 grain in the formerly used unit. Only 1 study of aspirin dose in patients with ACS on DAPT has been carried out but this only included patients on clopidogrel rather than ticagrelor and did not evaluate aspirin doses lower than 75 mg (Mehta, Tanguay et al. 2010).
Aspirin and ticagrelor are superior to aspirin and clopidogrel in preventing ischaemic complications in ACS but there is an increased rate of bleeding complications (Wallentin, Becker et al. 2009). There is some evidence that the benefit of ticagrelor over clopidogrel was diminished in patients taking higher doses of aspirin compared to lower doses (Mahaffey, Wojdyla et al. 2011).
The P2Y12 and arachidonic acid pathways appear to be linked. P2Y12 inhibition has been shown to reduce TXA2 release from platelets (Armstrong, Leadbeater et al. 2011) and potentiates the antiplatelet effect of PGI2 in vitro (Cattaneo and Lecchi 2007). Ticagrelor acts as a more potent P2Y12 inhibitor than clopidogrel (Storey, Angiolillo et al. 2010) and therefore may contribute more to this.
Ticagrelor has pleiotropic effects not seen with clopidogrel, including inhibition of erythrocyte adenosine uptake (Bonello, Laine et al. 2014) and, in a preclinical model, reduction of infarct size, an adenosine and COX2 dependent effect that is inhibited by high but not low dose aspirin (Nanhwan, Ling et al. 2014). Chronic, but not acute, ticagrelor treatment may upregulate COX2 expression (Nanhwan, Ling et al. 2014) and ticagrelor, but not clopidogrel, improves post-infarct remodeling (Ye, Birnbaum et al. 2015) and has an anticontractile effect on vascular smooth muscle cells when exposed to ADP which is inhibited by high dose, but not low dose, aspirin (Grzesk, Kozinski et al. 2013).
Additionally, statins, given to the majority of patients with ACS, reduce infarct size by a COX2 dependent mechanism and, again, this effect is inhibited by aspirin in a dose-dependent manner (Birnbaum, Lin et al. 2007). Inhibition of COX2 by higher doses of aspirin therefore may reduce these benefits.
In healthy volunteer studies, aspirin at a dose of 75 mg once daily provided only a small additional effect on platelets to prasugrel ex vivo (Leadbeater et al 2011) and similar findings have been shown with prasugrel (Armstrong et al 2011) and ticagrelor (Kirkby et al 2011) in vitro, however the clinical significance of this additional effect is not known as studies have not been made in patients with acute coronary syndrome, in whom platelet activation occurs and persists after the acute period (Ault, Cannon et al. 1999).
It has been suggested that ticagrelor monotherapy may in fact offer advantages over DAPT (Warner, Armstrong et al. 2010) and 2 trials including ACS patients after the very early period are currently in progress (National Institutes of Health 2014, National Institutes of Health 2015). However, given the fact that aspirin still possesses some antiplatelet effect in the presence of potent P2Y12 inhibition, its total omission may not prove to be the optimum strategy in higher risk patients, particularly given the current lack of evidence in patients rather than healthy individuals.
Aspirin inhibits TXA2 and PGI2 in vivo in a dose dependent manner and daily doses as low as 20 mg have been shown to significantly inhibit TXA2 release (Warner, Nylander et al. 2011), whilst similar doses provide minimal PGI2 inhibition and no significant prolongation of the bleeding time (Kallmann, Nieuwenhuis et al. 1987). Aspirin doses of less than 75mg OD have not been studied in combination with P2Y12 inhibitors. A strategy to reduce the effect of aspirin on beneficial COX2 whilst maintaining its antiplatelet effect in the presence of ticagrelor may therefore be a lower dose than the current standard.
Dosing frequency may also be open to optimization. Aspirin is cleared from the plasma quickly after administration but its effect lasts for the lifespan of a platelet due to its properties as an irreversible inhibitor (Patrono 1994). However, a significant proportion of the population have a high rate of platelet turnover that therefore reduces the duration of effect and may lead to inadequate platelet inhibition. This has been shown to be the case in patients with ischaemic heart disease and is most frequently a problem in those with diabetes mellitus, obesity and smokers (Henry, Vermillet et al. 2011). Twice-daily dosing may offer more consistency (Rocca, Santilli et al. 2012, Paikin, Hirsh et al. 2015). Again, this has not been studied when in combination with a P2Y12 inhibitor. As ticagrelor is taken twice daily, it would not significantly inconvenience patients to receive doses of aspirin in this way.
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
For inclusion in the study, subjects should fulfill the following criteria:
Exclusion criteria
Subjects should not enter the study if any of the following exclusion criteria are fulfilled:
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
20 participants in 2 patient groups
Loading...
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
Clinical trials
Research sites
Resources
Legal