* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download Document
Cardiac contractility modulation wikipedia , lookup
Cardiovascular disease wikipedia , lookup
Remote ischemic conditioning wikipedia , lookup
Baker Heart and Diabetes Institute wikipedia , lookup
Antihypertensive drug wikipedia , lookup
Drug-eluting stent wikipedia , lookup
History of invasive and interventional cardiology wikipedia , lookup
Quantium Medical Cardiac Output wikipedia , lookup
Prior to the start of the program, please check your syllabus to ensure you have the following printed program materials: • Pre-activity Survey – Located at the front of your syllabus • CME Evaluation with Post-activity Survey – Located at the back of your syllabus Disclosures • The relevant financial relationships reported by faculty that they or their spouse/partner have with commercial interests are located on page 5 of your syllabus • The relevant financial relationships reported by the steering committee that they or their spouse/partner have with commercial interests are provided on page 5 of your syllabus • The relevant financial relationships reported by the nonfaculty content contributors and/or reviewers that they or their spouse/partner have with commercial interests are located on page 5 of your syllabus Off-label Discussion Disclosure This educational activity may contain discussion of published and/or investigational uses of agents that are not indicated by the Food and Drug Administration. PCME does not recommend the use of any agent outside of the labeled indications. Please refer to the official prescribing information for each product for discussion of approved indications, contraindications and warnings. The opinions expressed are those of the presenters and are not to be construed as those of the publisher or grantors. Learning Objectives • Identify high-risk ACS patients (high-risk NSTEMI, STEMI) and promptly initiate suitable risk stratification and patient management strategies • Adopt and adhere to guidelines-based treatment strategies for use of appropriate antiplatelet options to reduce the risk of recurrent events • Identify inefficiencies in discharge planning and patient education on the necessity of drug adherence to improve quality of care and long-term outcomes of high-risk ACS patients Pre-activity Survey • Please take out the Pre-activity Survey from your packet • Your answers are important to us and will be used to help shape future CME activities • It is important that you fill out the information at the top of the form: – Please select the best answer(s) for the questions below: – Degree: _ MD/DO _ Nursing Professional _ PharmD _Other:_____________________________ – Specialty: _ Cardiologist _ Emergency Room Physician _ Internal Medicine _Other:______________________ Pre-activity Survey Question 1 How confident are you in your ability to adopt evidencebased care for high-risk NSTEMI patients to reduce the need for rehospitalization? 1 Not at all confident 2 3 4 5 Expert Pre-activity Survey Question 2 How confident are you in your ability to adopt evidencebased care for STEMI patients to reduce the need for rehospitalization? 1 Not at all confident 2 3 4 5 Expert Pre-activity Survey Question 3 The choice between an initial conservative strategy or an initial invasive strategy in patients diagnosed with NSTEACS is made largely on the basis of: A. Risk of ischemic complications B. Whether symptoms are typical or atypical C. Whether the ECG is interpretable D. Whether the patient can take a stress exercise test E. All of the above Pre-activity Survey Question 4 Compared to ACS patients who do not have diabetes, those who have diabetes mellitus are at: A. Greater risk of major cardiovascular events and similar risk of major bleeding events B. Greater risk of major cardiovascular events and greater risk of major bleeding events C. Similar risk of major cardiovascular events and greater risk of major bleeding events D. Similar risk of major cardiovascular events and similar risk of major bleeding events Pre-activity Survey Question 5 In STEMI patients, primary PCI is superior to fibrinolytic therapy to reduce in-hospital mortality if PCI can be performed within ___ hours after the onset time of infarction: A. <1.5 hours B. 3 hours C. 6 hours D. 12 hours E. 24 hours Pre-activity Survey Question 6 According to the GRACE registry, use of 5 or more medications for secondary prevention of ACS can reduce 6-month mortality by: A. Less than 20% B. 20%-30% C. 30%-40% D. 40%-50% E. More than 50% HIGH-RISK ACS Overview ACS Classification and Hospitalizations Acute Coronary Syndromes TIMI flow grade 2/3 in culprit artery - Troponin Unstable angina TIMI flow grade 0/1 in culprit artery + Troponin + Troponin NSTEMI STEMI 0.81 million admissions per year 0.33 million admissions per year Shared pathophysiology; Shared core treatment targets Gibson CM et al. Presented at: 2008 AHA Scientific Sessions. New Orleans, LA. Go AS et al. Heart Disease and Stroke Statistics – 2013 update. Circulation. 2013;1127:e6-e245 Acute Coronary Syndromes • Common Features of ACS – Similar pathophysiology – Similar presentation and early management rules • Differentiating Features of ACS – Unstable Angina Non-occlusive thrombus No diagnostic ECG changes, but ischemic ST-T changes confer higher risk Normal cardiac enzymes – NSTEMI Occluding thrombus sufficient to cause myocardial damage No diagnostic ECG changes, but ischemic ST-T changes: higher risk Elevated cardiac enzymes – STEMI Complete thrombus occlusion ST elevation or new LBBB Elevated cardiac enzymes More severe symptoms Age- and Sex-adjusted Incidence Rates Of Acute MI, 1999 to 2008. O’Gara PT et al. Circulation 2013;127:e362-e425 Copyright © American Heart Association Mortality in Acute Coronary Syndromes Death from Hospital Admission to 6 Months 16 STEMI % Mortality 12 NSTEMI 8 UA 4 0 GRACE n=43,810 0 30 60 90 Days Fox KAA et al. BMJ. 2006;333:1091. 120 150 180 “Dynamic Risk Stratification” Tools • History and physical • Standard ECG and non-standard ECG leads – 15-lead ECGs should perhaps become “standard” in all but very-low-risk patients • Biomarkers – CK-MB, troponins I and T, myoglobin – High-sensitivity troponin – Brain natriuretic peptide (BNP) • Non-invasive imaging – Echocardiogram – Stress testing – Technetium-99m-sestamibi • Invasive imaging – Cardiac computed tomography angiography (CCTA) • Predictive indices/schemes – Better as research tools than for real-time clinical decision-making Risk Scores History Presentation TIMI GRACE Age Hypertension Diabetes Smoking ↑ Cholesterol Family history History of CAD Severe angina Aspirin within 7 days Elevated markers ST-segment deviation Age Heart rate Systolic BP Elevated creatinine Heart failure Cardiac arrest Elevated markers ST-segment deviation GRACE = Global Registry of Acute Coronary Events; TIMI = Thrombolysis in Myocardial Infarction Antman EM et al. JAMA. 2000;284:835-842. Eagle KA et al. JAMA. 2004;291:2727-2733. Early Invasive vs Initial Conservative Strategy General Considerations in UA/NSTEMI EARLY INVASIVE STRATEGY GENERALLY PREFERRED • Recurrent angina at rest or with low level activities despite intensive medical therapy • Elevated cardiac biomarkers (TnT or TnI) • New or presumably new ST-depression • Signs or symptoms of heart failure or new or worsening mitral regurgitation • High-risk findings from noninvasive testing • Hemodynamic instability • Sustained ventricular tachycardia • PCI within 6 mo; prior CABG • High risk score (e.g. GRACE, TIMI) • Mild to moderate renal dysfunction • Diabetes mellitus • Reduced left ventricular function (LVEF <40%) INITIAL CONSERVATIVE STRATEGY GENERALLY PREFERRED OR REASONABLE • Low risk score (e.g. GRACE, TIMI) • Patient or physician preference in the absence of high-risk features CABG = coronary artery bypass graft surgery; GRACE = Global Registry of Acute Coronary Events; LV = left ventricular; LVEF = left ventricular ejection fraction; PCI = percutaneous coronary intervention; TIMI = Thrombolysis in Myocardial Infarction; TnI = troponin I; TnT = troponin T Anderson et al. J Am Coll Cardiol 2012;61:e1-e171 ACCF/AHA Guidelines 2011 Focused Update Early Invasive Strategies for High-Risk ACS Patients I II a II b I I I High-risk patients with: - Refractory ischemia - Wright RS et al. Circulation. 2011;123:2022-2060. Recurrent angina/ischemia Elevated cardiac biomarkers (T) New ST-segment depression New CHF or worsening MR High-risk on non-invasive testing LV dysfunction (EF <40%) Hemodynamic instability Sustained VT Diabetics with single-vessel disease Mild to moderate kidney disease PCI within 6 months, prior CABG high-risk score Not in low-risk women TACTICS: Primary Endpoint Death, MI, Rehospitalized for ACS at 6 Months 19.4% 20 15.9% % Patients 16 12 O.R. 0.78 95% CI (0.62, 0.97) P=0.025 8 4 Conservative :Invasive: 0 0 1 Cannon CP et al. N Engl J Med. 2001;344:1879-1887. 4 2 3 Time (months) 5 6 ANTIPLATELET THERAPY IN ACS Platelet Aggregation and Mechanisms of Action of Antiplatelet Therapies ADP clopidogrel prasugrel ADP ticagrelor ADP cAMP Glycoprotein IIb/IIIa inhibitors Activation abciximab eptifibatide tirofiban Gp IIb/IIIa (Aggregation) COX TXA2 aspirin ADP = adenosine diphosphate; TXA2 = thromboxane A2; COX = cyclooxygenase Adapted from Schafer AI. Am J Med. 1996;101:199-209. Collagen Thrombin TXA2 Heparins CURE Study Primary End Point: MI/Stroke/CV Death Cumulative Hazard Rate 0.14 20% Relative Risk Reduction Placebo + Aspirin (n=6303) 0.12 0.10 0.08 Clopidogrel + Aspirin (n=6259) 0.06 0.04 P<0.001 n=12,562 0.02 0.00 0 3 6 9 Months of Follow-up Yusuf S et al. N Engl J Med. 2001;345:494-502. 12 ADP P2Y12 Receptor Blockers Class Reversibility Activation Clopidogrel Prasugrel Ticagrelor Thienopyridine Thienopyridine Triazolopyrimidine Irreversible Irreversible Reversible Prodrug, limited by Prodrug, not limited metabolism by metabolism Active drug Onset of Effect^ 2-4 hours 30 minutes 30 minutes Duration of Effect 3-10 days 5-10 days 3-4 days Withdrawal before major surgery 5 days 7 days 5 days ^ 50% inhibition of platelet aggregation Hamm CW et al. Eur Heart J. 2011;32:2999-3054 Metabolism of Novel P2Y12 Receptor Blockers P-Glycoprotein Prasugrel Intestinal Absorption Ticagrelor Intestinal Absorption Intestinal Esterases 85% Hepatic CYP3A4 30% 1 Step Intestinal/hepatic 55% CYP-Conversion 3A4 2B6 2C9 2C19 Efficient active metabolite generation Rapid Consistent /Greater IPA Rapid Consistent /Greater IPA IPA = individual platelet adhesion assay Gurbel PA et al. Expert Opin Pharmacother. 2010;11:2251-2259 CURRENT: Clopidogrel Double vs Standard Dose Primary Outcome: PCI Patients CV Death, MI or Stroke Clopidogrel Standard 15% RRR 0.04 Cumulative Hazard Clopidogrel Double 0.03 0.02 HR 0.85 95% CI 0.74-0.99 P=0.036 0.0 0 3 6 9 12 15 18 21 Days Mehta SR et al. Presented at: European Society of Cardiology, September, 2009. 24 27 30 PRINCIPLE TIMI 44: Comparison of Prasugrel with Higher Dose Clopidogrel IPA (%; 20 mM ADP) N=201 100 IPA (%; 20 mM ADP) P<0.0001 for each 100 P<0.0001 74.8 80 Prasugrel 60 mg 80 64.5 61.9 69.3 60 60 45.4 40 Clopidogrel 600 mg 31.8 30.8 20 4.9 40 32.6 20 20.3 0 0 0 4 8 12 16 Hours Wiviott SD et al. Circulation. 2007;116:2923-2932. 20 24 28 Clopidogrel Prasugrel 150 mg 10 mg 14 Days TRITON-TIMI 38 Efficacy and Safety Prasugrel vs Clopidogrel 16 138 events Endpoint (%) 14 12 CV Death/MI/Stroke Clopidogrel 10 Prasugrel 8 12.1 HR 0.81 (0.73-0.90) 9.9 P < 0.001 NNT = 46 6 TIMI Major Non-CABG Bleeds Prasugrel 4 2 0 Clopidogrel 0 30 60 90 180 270 Days After Randomization CABG = coronary-artery bypass surgery; NNH = number needed to harm; NNT = number needed to treat; TIMI = Thrombolysis in Myocardial Infarction. All Cause Mortality: Clopidogrel 3.2%, Prasugrel 3.0%, P = 0.64. Wiviott SD, et al. N Engl J Med. 2007;357:2001-2015. 360 HR 1.32 2.4 (1.03-1.68) 1.8 P = 0.03 NNH = 167 450 35 events Clopidogrel vs. Ticagrelor ONSET/OFFSET Study Loading IPA (%; 20 mM ADP, Final) 100 * * Maintenance and Offset Ticagrelor 180mg * * 80 60 * 40 Clopidogrel 600 mg 20 0 0 .5 4 8 12 16 20 24 Hours *P<0.0001; †P<0.005; ‡, P<0.05, ticagrelor vs clopidogrel. Gurbel PA et al. Circulation. 2009;120:2577-2585. PLATO: Kaplan-Meier Estimate of Time to First Primary Cumulative incidence (%) Efficacy Event (Composite of CV Death, MI, or Stroke) 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 9.8 Ticagrelor HR = hazard ratio CI = confidence interval HR 0.84 (95% CI 0.77–0.92), P=0.0003 0 No. at risk Ticagrelor Clopidogrel 11.7 Clopidogrel 60 120 180 240 300 360 5,161 5,096 4,147 4,047 Days after randomisation 9,333 9,291 8,628 8,521 Wallentin L et al. N Engl J Med. 2009;361:10451057. 8,460 8,362 8,219 8,124 6,743 6,743 Time to Major Bleeding: Primary Safety Event K-M estimated rate (% per year) 15 Ticagrelor 10 Clopidogrel 11.58 11.20 5 HR 1.04 (95% CI 0.95–1.13), P=0.434 0 0 60 120 180 240 300 360 Days from first IP dose No. at risk Ticagrelor 9,235 7,246 6,826 6,545 5,129 3,783 3,433 Clopidogrel 9,186 7,305 6,930 6,670 5,209 3,841 3,479 Wallentin L et al. N Engl J Med. 2009;361:1045-1057. Ticagrelor Interaction with Aspirin Dose Hazard Ratio (CV Death, MI, Stroke) Compared With Clopidogrel Region US Non-US Aspirin (mg/day) Ticagrelor N / Events Clopidogrel N / Events Hazard Ratio 95% CI ≥300 >100 – <300 ≤100 ≥300 >100 – <300 ≤100 324 / 40 22 / 2 284 / 19 140 / 28 503 / 62 7449 / 546 352 / 27 16 / 2 263 / 24 140 / 23 511 / 63 7443 / 699 1.62 0.73 1.23 1.00 0.78 0.99 – 2.64 0.40 – 1.33 0.71 – 2.14 0.71 – 1.42 0.69 – 0.87 Warning: Aspirin Dose and Ticagrelor Effectiveness • Maintenance doses of aspirin > 100 mg reduce effectiveness of ticagrelor; should be avoided. • After any initial dose, use with aspirin 75-100 mg per day. Mahaffey KW et al. Circulation. 2011;124:544-554. TRITON vs PLATO Proof of concept: Higher Inhibition of Platelet Activityi to Support ACS Differences between trials 1. Patient Population TRITON: ACS undergoing PCI (indication only for ACS undergoing PCI) PLATO: Full spectrum ACS (indication for ACS irrespective of management) 2. Pretreatment TRITON: No pretreatment (except STEMI) PLATO: Pretreatment 3. Clopidogrel Loading Dose TRITON: 300mg PLATO: 300-600mg 4. Duration of trial (median) TRITON: 14.5 months PLATO: 9 months Novel P2Y12 Receptor Antagonists Prasugrel • Contraindicated: high-risk bleeding; prior TIA/stroke; hypersensitivity • Precautions: elderly (>75y), low-weight (<60kg); CABG/surgery (7days). Ticagrelor • Contraindicated: high-risk bleeding; prior hemorrhagic stroke; severe hepatic dysfunction; hypersensitivity • Precautions: compliance (b.i.d. administration), drug interactions (CYP 3A4 interfering agents); regional differences (North America/ASA dose <100mg), COPD/asthma, bradyarythmia, gout syndromes, CABG/surgery (5 days). What are We Treating with Extended Dual Antiplatelet Therapy? Long-Term Treatment (Stable Atherosclerosis) “Vulnerable” Stent “Vulnerable” Patient OR Curfman GD, et al. N Engl J Med. 2007;356:1059-1060 Meadows TA, Bhatt DL. Circ Res. 2007;100:1261-1275. CHARISMA Prior MI Cohort Management of STEMI A Focus On Antiplatelet Therapy Time and Myocardial Salvage An Essential Fact Regardless of Mode of Reperfusion Mortality Reduction (%) 100 80 Potential outcomes E 60 D A– A– B– E– C 40 B 20 B — no benefit C — benefit C — benefit D — harm A Extent of salvage (% of area at risk) 0 1 3 6 Time to treatment is critical Gersh BJ, et al. JAMA. 2005;293:979-986. 12 Hours 24 Opening the artery is the primary goal (PCI > lysis) STEMI: Relationship Between PCI–Related Delay and In-Hospital Mortality (NRMI 2,3,4,5) NRMI 2,3,4,5 = National Registry of Myocardial Infarction, registries 2, 3, 4, 5 X-PCI = transfer PCI O-FT = onsite fibrinolytic therapy XDB-DN = transfer door to balloon time Pinto D S et al. Circulation 2011;124:2512-2521 Regional Systems of STEMI Care, Reperfusion Therapy, and Time-to-Treatment Goals I IIaIIb III Reperfusion therapy should be administered to all eligible patients with STEMI with symptom onset within the prior 12 hours. I IIaIIb III Primary PCI is the recommended method of reperfusion when it can be performed in a timely fashion by experienced operators. I IIaIIb III EMS transport directly to a PCI-capable hospital for primary PCI is the recommended triage strategy for patients with STEMI with an ideal FMC-to-device time system goal of 90 minutes or less.* *The proposed time windows are system goals. For any individual patient, every effort should be made to provide reperfusion therapy as rapidly as possible. O’Gara PT et al. J Am Coll Cardiol. 2013;61:e78-e140 Streptokinase, Aspirin, or Both in Patients with Acute MI ASA Improves Outcomes in STEMI – We Haven’t Looked Back 17187 Patients 2x2 Randomization SK vs Placebo ASA (162. 5 mg) vs Placebo ISIS-2 Collaborative Group. Lancet 1988;2(8607):349-360 Acute MI Immediate Angioplasty Versus Thrombolytic Therapy In Hospital Events (%) 14 P=0.05 12 12 10 P=0.06 P=0.06 8 6.5 Lytic 6.5 6 4 5.1 2.6 2.6 P=0.02 N = 395 2 2 0 0 Death MI The Primary Angioplasty in Myocardial Infarction Study Group Grines CL et al. N Engl J Med. 1993;328:673-679 Death/MI PCI ICH TRITON TIMI 38: STEMI Cohort N=3534 15 Percent (%) CV Death / MI / Clopidogrel Stroke 10 9.5% 6.5% 5 Prasugrel HR 0.68 (0.54-0.87) P=0.002 TIMI Major NonCABG Bleeds 12.4% 10.0% HR 0.79 (0.65-0.97) P=0.02 NNT = 42 2.4 Prasugrel Clopidogrel 2.1 0 0 30 60 90 180 270 360 Days From Randomization Montalescot g. et al Lancet 2009; 373:723-731 450 Stent Thrombosis (ARC Definite + Probable) 3 Any Stent at Index PCI N = 12,844 Endpoint (%) Clopidogrel 2.4 (142) 2 1.1 (68) 1 Prasugrel HR 0.48 P <0.0001 NNT= 77 0 0 30 60 90 180 270 Days Wiviott SD et al N Engl J Med. 2007;357:2001-2015 360 450 PLATO STE-ACS Primary Composite Endpoint CV death, MI or stroke (%) 10.8% 9.4% STE-ACS Ticagrelor (n=3752) Clopidogrel (n=3792) HR (95% CI) = 0.87(0.75–1.01) p=0.07 Months after randomisation Primary endpoint benefit with ticagrelor was consistent with the overall PLATO trial results ACS, acute coronary syndromes; CI, confidence interval; CV, cardiovascular; HR, hazard ratio; MI, myocardial infarction; STE, ST-segment elevation. Steg PG, et al. Circulation 2010;122:2131–2141; Wallentin L, et al. N Engl J Med 2009;361:1045–1057. Primary Efficacy Endpoint In Selected Pre-defined Subgroups Hazard Ratio Total (95% CI) Patients Characteristic Overall treatment effect Primary Endpoint 8,430 KM % at Month 12 Ti Cl. . 9.3 11.0 p-value HR (95% CI) (Interaction) 0.85 (0.74, 0.97) Definition of STEMI* 0.49 6,284 720 886 Persist. ST-segment elev. LBBB Final diagnosis (only) 8.9 10.4 14.5 14.5 8.4 12.5 0.87 (0.74, 1.02) 0.89 (0.59, 1.34) 0.67 (0.44, 1.02) Intended clop dose ≤24h post first dose 0.90 5,505 2,922 300 mg 600 mg Time from index event to therapy <12 hours ≥12 hours 0.2 10.1 11.9 7.9 9.3 0.84 (0.71, 0.99) 0.86 (0.67, 1.11) 0.89 6,072 2,270 0.5 Ticagrelor better 1.0 8.3 9.5 12.0 14.2 0.86 (0.73, 1.03) 0.85 (0.67, 1.07) 2.0 Clopidogrel better *Patients with LBBB and ST-elevation were classified as LBBB Steg PG, et al. Circulation 2010;122:2131–2141; Wallentin L, et al. N Engl J Med 2009;361:1045–1057. PLATO STE-ACS: Stent Thrombosis Stent thrombosis,* %[Steg 2010:K] Ticagrelor Clopidogrel (n=3752) (n=3792) HR (95% CI) p value Definite† 1.6 2.4 0.03 Probable or definite† 2.6 3.4 0.05 Possible, probable, or 3.3 4.3 0.04 definite† 1.0 *As per Academic Research Consortium definitions.[Cutlip 2007:A] †Denominator is number of patients receiving at least one stent. ACS, acute coronary syndromes; CI, confidence interval; HR, hazard ratio; STE, ST-segment elevation. Cutlip DE, et al. Circulation 2007;155:2344–2351; Steg PG, et al. Circulation 2010;122:2131–2141. Ticagrelor better Clopidogrel better PLATO STE-ACS Kaplan–Meier estimated rate (% after 1 year) Non-CABG- and CABG-related Major Bleeding ACS, acute coronary syndromes; CABG, coronary artery bypass graft; NS, not significant; STE, ST-segment elevation; TIMI, thrombolysis in myocardial infarction. Steg PG, et al. Circulation 2010;122:2131–2141. ACS High Bleeding Risk Or Other Concerns Yes Bleeding Risks • • • • • • • Active Bleeding Major Surgery Thrombolytic Therapy Oral anticoagulants Prior ICH or Previous Severe Bleeding Severe Liver Disease Any history of STROKE/TIA for Prasugrel Other (Mostly Long Term) • Cost • Coverage • Compliance Concerns Standard Clopidogrel Pathway STEMI High Bleeding Risk Or Other Concerns Yes Standard Clopidogrel Pathway No Planned PPCI No DAPT Load Prasugrel or Ticagrelor if Rapidly Available Prior DAPT Load Ticagrelor If Rapidly Available Dx Catheterization CABG No DAPT early, clopidogrel/tic agrelor late PCI Prasugrel* Ticagrelor * Without Contraindication (STROKE/TIA) Dx Catheterization Med Rx Clopidogrel Ticagrelor CABG PCI Med Rx Stop DAPT early, clopidogrel/tic agrelor late Ticagrelor Clopidogrel Ticagrelor 2013 ACC/AHA STEMI Guidelines Antithrombotic Therapy – Primary PCI Class of Level of Recommendation Evidence O’Gara et al. J Am Coll Cardiol..2013;61:e78–e140 Guideline Recommendations for Duration of P2Y12 Inhibitor Therapy Society Management Recommended Duration Medical PCI (DES) Ideally up to 12 months At least 12 months 12 months All ACCP “Data suggest … SES or PES … may benefit from prolonged DAPT beyond 1 year.” “… data suggest that DAPT for 6 mos might be sufficient because late and very late ST correlate poorly with d/c of DAPT.” Medical 12 months PCI 12 months (After 12 mos, recommend single antiplatelet therapy over continuation of DAPT) 2011 ACCF/AHA UA/NSTEMI; 2011 ACCF/AHA/SCAI PCI; 2010 ESC Myocardial Revascularization; 2011 ESC NSTEACS; 2012 ACCP Antithrombotic Therapy Antiplatelet Therapy to Support Primary PCI for STEMI I IIaIIb III It is reasonable to use 81 mg of aspirin per day in preference to higher maintenance doses after primary PCI. I IIaIIb III P2Y12 inhibitor therapy should be given for 1 year to patients with STEMI who receive a stent (BMS or DES) during primary PCI using the following maintenance doses: • Clopidogrel 75 mg daily; or • Prasugrel 10 mg daily; or • Ticagrelor 90 mg twice a day* *The recommended maintenance dose of aspirin to be used with ticagrelor is 81 mg daily. O’Gara PT et al. J Am Coll Cardiol. 2013;61:e78-e140 Periprocedural Anti Thrombotic Medication in Primary PCI ADP = adenosine diphosphata. Steg PG et al. Eur Heart J. 2012;33:2569-2619 doi:1093/eurheatj/ehs215 Guideline for STEMI Reperfusion at a Non–PCI-Capable Hospital Secondary Protection Against Post-MI Mortality • Beta blocker 15% risk reduction ISIS 1. Lancet. 1986;2(8498):57-66 • ACEI 19% risk reduction Pfeffer et al. N Engl J Med. 1992;327:669-677 • CAB comparable to ACEI Pfeffer et al. N Engl J Med. 2003;349:1893-1906 • Aldosterone antagonist Pitt et al. N Engl J. Med. 2003;348:1309-1321 • Lipid management 15% risk reduction Secondary Prevention and Long Term Management • Smoking cessation – complete • Blood pressure control goal – < 140/90 mm Hg – <130/80 mm Hg if chronic kidney disease or diabetes • Physical activity – Minimum goal: 30 minutes 3 to 4 days per week – Optimal goal: daily • Diabetes management – Goal: HbA1c < 7% • Weight management – BMI Goal: 18.5 to 24.9 kg/m2 – Waist circumference goal Women: < 35 in. • Men: < 40 in. • Management of High-Risk NSTEMI ACS with Diabetes Mellitus Comorbidity Case Study: Presentation • Caucasian male age 67 years presents to ED with increasing dyspnea associated with substernal chest pressure over the past 1-2 hours • Subtle increase in exertional dyspnea, fatigue, and chest pressure over past 2 weeks • ECG: ST segment depression (2 mm) in II, III, aVF • Physical exam: – Heart rate, 70 bpm; occasional PVCs; blood pressure, 125/80 mm Hg – Lungs: Soft bibasilar rales; heart: soft gallop, 1/6 SM Case Study: Additional Medical History • Known history of CAD – CABG X 4 performed ~ 8 years ago • Patient 15-year history of type 2 diabetes with variable control; currently on insulin therapy • History of hypertension, mixed dyslipidemia • Prior tobacco use • Peripheral artery disease, mild chronic kidney disease • Current medications: aspirin, insulin, lisinopril, metoprolol, simvastatin Case Study: Additional Medical History • No medical records available • He knows he had a CABG x 4 and last year underwent a LHC for “chest pain” and he states that “the doctor said that everything looks great and that all my vessels are OK except for the one going to the back of my heart which has a small blockage, but does not need a stent because doesn’t look too bad” Case Study: Test Results • K+, 4.0; glucose, 165 mg/dL; creatinine, 1.2 • CBC: WBC, 10.1; Hct, 43; Plt, 320; Hb, 13.4 • Troponin T: 0.1 μg/L • Chest radiograph: Mild vascular congestion • Symptoms and ECG changes resolve with nitroglycerin sl • Patient is treated with aspirin 325mg loading dose and enoxaparin 1mg/kg in the ED • He is admitted to the CCU • EF: 55% • Sent for LHC Cumulative Incidence of All-Cause Mortality Through 1 Year After ACS Diabetes Subgroup Analysis 11 TIMI Trials, >62,000 pts 10,613 diabetics (17.1%) STEMI UA/STEMI Diabetes No Diabetes 14 Diabetes No Diabetes Mortality, % 12 P<0.0001 STEMI 10 8 P<0.0001 6 P<0.0001 UA/NSTEMI 4 2 P<0.0001 0 0 30 No. at Risk STEMI Diabetes 7156 6508 No diabetes 39421 37136 UA/NSTEMI Diabetes 3457 3313 No diabetes 12002 11658 Donahoe SM et al. JAMA. 2007;298:765-775. 90 180 270 360 Days after ACS 2947 16685 2653 15274 2118 12276 1610 9351 2923 10505 2339 8191 1317 5141 924 4008 Mechanisms Involved in Platelet Dysfunction in Diabetes Mellitus Hyperglycemia Increased P-selectin expression Osmotic effect Activation of PKC Decreased membrane fluidity by glycation of surface proteins Deficient Insulin Action Impaired response to NO and PGI2 IRS-dependent factors: Increased intracellular Ca++ Degranulation Associated Metabolic Conditions Obesity Other Cellular Abnormalities Platelet Endothelial Dysfunction Dyslipidemia Inflammation Increased platelet turnover Increased intracellular Ca++ Upregulation of P2Y12 signaling Oxidative stress H2O Increased P-selectin and GP expression Increased production of TF Decreased NO and PGI2 production ACP=adenosine disphosphate; GP=glycoprotein; IRS-1=insulin receptor substrate-1; NO=nitric oxide; PGI2=prostacyclin; Endothelial Cells PKC= protein kinase C; TF=tissue factor. Reprinted with permission from Ferreiro JL, Angiolillo DJ. Circulation 2011;123:798-813 Optimal Antithrombotic Management of the Patient With Diabetes and ACS/PCI Acute and post-discharge phase (eg., oral agents) Effect of Antiplatelet Therapy in Reducing Vascular Events in Diabetic Patients Control Antiplatelet therapy Adjusted (%) of pts (+1 SD) with vascular events 30 20 10 0 Benefit/1000 pts (SD): 2P: No Diabetes Diabetes 36 (3) <0.00001 38 (12) <0.002 Antiplatelet Trialists Collaboration BMJ 1994;308:81-106 Platelet Function (COX-1 Independent) In DM Vs Non-DM On Aspirin LTA p<0.05 80 60 40 20 0 DM Non-DM 100 % Patients CEPI-CT<300 sec % Platelet aggregation 100 PFA-100 p<0.01 80 60 40 20 0 DM Non-DM LTA = Light Transmission Aggregation Angiolillo DJ et al. Diabetes 2005; 54:2430-2435 Angiolillo DJ et al. Am J Cardiol 2006; 97:38-43 Schematic of Circadian Release of Platelets into Bloodstream from Bone Marrow and Impact of a Single Daily Dose of Aspirin in Newly Generated Platelets in Type 2 DM Twice daily aspirin is associated with better platelet inhibition than increasing once daily dosing in DM patients. Capodanno D et al. Circ Cardiovasc Interv. 2011;4:180-187. CURE: Outcomes With Clopidogrel in Various Subgroups Percentage of Patients with Event No. of Characteristic Patients Overall 12562 Associated MI 3283 No associated MI 9279 Male sex 7726 Female sex 4836 65 yr old 6354 > 65 yr old 6208 ST-segment deviation 6275 o ST-segment deviation 6287 Enzymes elevated at entry 3176 Enzymes not elevated at entry 9386 Diabetes 2840 No diabetes 9722 Low risk 4187 Intermediate risk 4185 High risk 4184 History of revascularization 2246 No history of revascularization 10316 Revascularization after randomization 4577 No revascularization after randomization 7985 Yusf S et al. N Engl J Med. 2001;345:494-502. Clopidogr Placebo + ASA el + ASA 9.3 11.4 11.3 13.7 8.6 10.6 9.1 11.9 9.5 10.7 5.4 13.3 7.6 15.3 11.5 7.0 10.7 8.8 14.2 7.9 5.1 6.5 16.3 8.4 9.5 11.5 8.1 14.3 N 8.6 13.0 10.9 16.7 9.9 6.7 9.4 18.0 14.4 10.7 13.9 10.0 0.4 0.6 0.8 1.0 1.2 Relative Risk (95% CI) Clopidogrel Better Placebo Better Influence of Diabetes Mellitus on Clopidogrel-induced Antiplatelet Effects Acute Phase of Treatment P=0.002 8% 14% 56% 24 hrs post 300 mg LD Non-responders (Platelet inhibition <10%) Low responders (Platelet inhibition 10-29%) Responders (Platelet inhibition >30%) Angiolillo DJ et al. Diabetes. 2005;54:2430-2435. 78% Platelet aggregation (%) P=0.04 6% 80 No-DM DM 38% Long-term Phase of Treatment P<0.0001 60 40 20 0 DM No DM ADP 20M DM No DM ADP 6M Angiolillo DJ et al. J Am Coll Cardiol. 2006;48:298-304. Diabetes as Predictor of Stent Thrombosis at 1 Year in the Era of DES Odds/hazard ratio 5 4 OR=2.0 (0.8-4.9) OR=2.8 (1.7-4.3) HR=3.7 (1.7-7.9) HR=2.03 (1.07-3.83) IDDM IDDM Diabetes Diabetes 3 2 1 0 Kuchulakanti PK et al. Urban P et al. Iakovou I et al. Circulation Circulation JAMA 2006;113:1108-1113 2006;113:1434-1441 2005;293:2126-2130 Daemen J et al. Lancet 2007;116:961-968 Strategies to Enhance P2Y12 Inhibition in Patients With Diabetes • Increase clopidogrel dosing (eg, 150 mg maintenance dosing) • Adding agents that modulate intraplatelet cAMP (eg, triple therapy: ASA + clopidogrel + cilostazol) • Using novel potent P2Y12 inhibitors (eg, prasugrel, ticagrelor) Efficacy of New Drugs/Approaches in Reducing Adverse Outcomes in Diabetes Mellitus From Large-Scale Clinical Trials Study % of Events Standard Hazard Ratio (95% confidence interval) New Drug/Approach TRITON-TIMI 38 17.0 12.2 0.70 (0.58 – 0.85) PLATO 16.2 14.1 0.88 (0.76 – 1.03) 5.6 4.9 0.87 (0.66 – 1.15) CURRENT OASIS 7 (PCI Cohort) 0 0.5 New Drug/Approach Better 1 1.5 Standard Clopidogrel Better CURRENT-OASIS= Clopidogrel Optimal Loading Dose Usage to Reduce Recurrent Events Optimal Antiplatelet Strategy for Interventions; PCI=percutaneous intervention; PLATO= A Study of Platelet Inhibition and Patient Outcomes; TRITON-TIMI= Trial To Assess Improvement in Therapeutic Outcomes by Optimizing Platelet Inhibition With Prasugrel Thrombolysis in Myocardial Infarction. Reprinted with permission from Ferreiro JL, Angiolillo DJ. Circulation 2011;123:798-813 TRITON TIMI-38: Diabetic Subgroup (n=3146) 18 Clopidogrel 16 CV Death/MI/Stroke 14 Endpoint (%) 17.0 12 Prasugrel 10 8 12.2 HR 0.70 P<0.001 NNT = 21 6 TIMI Major Non-CABG Bleeds 4 2 Clopidogrel Prasugrel 2.6 2.5 0 0 30 60 90 180 270 Days Wiviott SD, Braunwald E, Angiolillo DJ et al. Circulation. 2008;118:1626-1636. 360 450 TRITON TIMI-38: CV Death/MI/Stroke by Diabetic Status Pras Clop Reduction in Risk 9.2% 10.6% 14% DM No Insulin 11.5% 15.3% 26% DM on Insulin 14.3% 22.2% 37% No DM 0.3 1 2 Prasugrel better Clopidogrel better Wiviott SD, Braunwald E, Angiolillo DJ et al. Circulation. 2008;118:1626-1636. OPTIMUS-3: Optimizing Antiplatelet Therapy in Diabetes Mellitus Prasugrel (standard dose) vs Clopidogrel (high dose) in DM patients 350 B LD MD Washout 300 PRU 250 200 150 *** *** 100 50 0 *** Mean±SE 0 4 *** ***p<0.0001 24 7 days Hours post LD No study drug (7 days) prasugrel 60 mg LD/10 mg MD clopidogrel 600 mg LD/150 mg MD Verify Now®-P2Y12 % Inhibition Similar findings obtained with MPA to 5 and 20 µM ADP, VASP PRI, and Verify Now® PRU Angiolillo DJ et al. Eur Heart J. 2011;32:838-846 PLATO: Diabetes PLATO: Diabetes PLATO: Diabetes ABCs of Treatment of Diabetic Patients and Impact on Thrombosis A HbA1C (blood glucose): <7% B Blood pressure: <130/80 mm Hg C Cholesterol-LDL: <70 mg/dl Platelet Reactivity Discharge Strategies for Patients Post-ACS Long-term Dual Antiplatelet Therapy, ACEI or ARB, β-blocker, Statin Therapy + Lifestyle Modification (Smoking cessation, nutrition, and exercise) + Cardiac Rehabilitation (PCP + cardiologist + other team members) + Patient Education (Disease state, medication use, side effects) + Medication Compliance (Counseling, other strategies) ACEI = angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor; ARB = angiotensin receptor blocker; PCP = primary care physician. Antman EM et al. J Am Coll Cardiol. 2008;51:210-247; Levine GN et al. Circulation. 2011;124:e547-e651. Evidence-based Therapies on 6-month Survival GRACE Registry Cohort* NUMBER OF THERAPIES (vs 0 or 1 therapy) OR (95% CI) 2 therapies 0.80 (0.52-1.26) 3 therapies 0.74 (0.48-1.13) 4 therapies 0.59 (0.39-0.90) 5 therapies 0.51 (0.33-0.78) 6 therapies 0.40 (0.26-0.62) 7 therapies 0.27 (0.16-0.44) 8 therapies 0.31 (0.17-0.57) 0 OR = odds ratio *Registry of patients with ACS Chew DP et al. Heart. 2010;96:1201-1206. 0.5 1 OR 1.5 2 Participant CME Evaluation • Please take out the Participant CME Post-survey and Evaluation from the back of your packet • If you are not seeking credit, we ask that you fill out the information pertaining to your degree and specialty, as well as the few questions we will read through now measuring the knowledge and competence you have garnered from this program. The post-survey is located on page 1 of the evaluation form. Post-activity Survey Question 1 After participating in this activity, how confident are you in adopting evidence-based care for high-risk NSTEMI patients to reduce the need for rehospitalization? 1 Not at all confident 2 3 4 5 Expert Post-activity Survey Question 2 After participating in this activity, how confident are you in adopting evidence-based care for STEMI patients to reduce the need for rehospitalization? 1 Not at all confident 2 3 4 5 Expert Pre-activity Survey Question 3 The choice between an initial conservative strategy or an initial invasive strategy in patients diagnosed with NSTEACS is made largely on the basis of: A. Risk of ischemic complications B. Whether symptoms are typical or atypical C. Whether the ECG is interpretable D. Whether the patient can take a stress exercise test E. All of the above Pre-activity Survey Question 4 Compared to ACS patients who do not have diabetes, those who have diabetes mellitus are at: A. Greater risk of major cardiovascular events and similar risk of major bleeding events B. Greater risk of major cardiovascular events and greater risk of major bleeding events C. Similar risk of major cardiovascular events and greater risk of major bleeding events D. Similar risk of major cardiovascular events and similar risk of major bleeding events Pre-activity Survey Question 5 In STEMI patients, primary PCI is superior to fibrinolytic therapy to reduce in-hospital mortality if PCI can be performed within ___ hours after the onset time of infarction: A. <1.5 hours B. 3 hours C. 6 hours D. 12 hours E. 24 hours Pre-activity Survey Question 6 According to the GRACE registry, use of 5 or more medications for secondary prevention of ACS can reduce 6-month mortality by: A. Less than 20% B. 20%-30% C. 30%-40% D. 40%-50% E. More than 50% Thank you for joining us today! Please remember to turn in your evaluation form. Your participation will help shape future CME activities.