Affiliation:
1. Division of Vascular Surgery, University of Pittsburgh Medical Center, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, United States
Abstract
Antiplatelet pharmacotherapy for endovascular interventions has been widely adopted, with clopidogrel
being one of the most common agents prescribed. A fraction of patients is resistant to clopidogrel resulting
in decreased platelet inhibition despite adequate use. This finding is often termed high on-treatment platelet reactivity
(HPR) and may lead to decreased patency in lower extremity arterial endovascular interventions. Current
literature on HPR with lower extremity arterial endovascular interventions is limited to only a few studies. Resistance
to clopidogrel is largely a result of CYP2C19 enzyme loss of function alleles. Several tests are available to
measure clopidogrel resistance but light transmittance aggregometry remains the gold standard, yet direct genetic
testing may be more reliable. One-year patency rates following lower extremity arterial endovascular interventions
in patients with clopidogrel resistance (HPR) range between 35%-83% whereas those with the proper response
to clopidogrel range between 73%-100%. Patients with decreased CYP2C19 activity show a significant
decrease in one-year patency of endovascular femoropopliteal interventions (35% vs. 73%; p=0.006). Among
patients tested for platelet function after in-stent thrombosis, up to 53% are resistant to clopidogrel. Lack of robust
data limits our ability to predict patency in lower extremity arterial interventions for patients with HPR, but
there is little doubt that longer patency seems to favor non-HPR patients. Large population, prospective trials are
needed to guide our practice.
Publisher
Bentham Science Publishers Ltd.
Subject
Drug Discovery,Pharmacology
Cited by
9 articles.
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