Current and Future Roles of Glycoprotein IIb–IIIa Inhibitors in Primary Angioplasty for ST-Segment Elevation Myocardial Infarction

Author:

De Luca Giuseppe12ORCID,Verburg Ashley3ORCID,Hof Arnoud van’t45ORCID,ten Berg Jurrien3,Kereiakes Dean J.6ORCID,Coller Barry S.7ORCID,Gibson Charles Michael8ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Division of Cardiology, Polyclinic G. Martino, University of Messina, 98122 Messina, Italy

2. Division of Cardiology, IRCSS Hospital Nuovo-Galeazzi Sant’Ambrogio, 20157 Milan, Italy

3. Department of Cardiology, St. Antonius Hospital, 3435 CM Nieuwegein, The Netherlands

4. Department of Cardiology, Maastricht University Medical Centre, 6229 HX Maastricht, The Netherlands

5. Cardiovascular Research Institute Maastricht, 6229 ER Maastricht, The Netherlands

6. The Carl and Edyth Lindner Research Center, The Christ Hospital, Cincinnati, OH 45219, USA

7. Laboratory of Blood and Vascular Biology, Rockefeller University, New York, NY 10065, USA

8. Perfuse Study Group, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA 02114, USA

Abstract

Acute myocardial infarction still represents the major cause of mortality in high-income countries. Therefore, considerable efforts have been focused on the treatment of myocardial infarctions in the acute and long-term phase, with special attention being paid to reperfusion strategies and adjunctive antithrombotic therapies. In fact, despite the successful mechanical recanalization of the epicardial conduit, a substantial percentage of patients still experience poor myocardial reperfusion or acute/subacute in-stent thrombosis. Due the delayed onset of action of currently available oral antiplatelet therapies, glycoprotein (GP) IIb–IIIa inhibitors could be expected to improve clinical outcomes, especially when administrated in the early phase of the infarction, due to the larger platelet composition of fresh thrombi, the dynamic nature of early thrombi, and the larger amount of viable myocardium existing in the early, as compared to a delayed, phase. Considerable evidence has accumulated regarding the benefits from GP IIb–IIIa inhibitors on mortality, especially among high-risk patients and when administered as an upstream strategy. Therefore, based on currently available data, GP IIb–IIIa inhibitors can be considered when the drug can be administered within the first 3 h of symptom onset and among high-risk patients (e.g., those with advanced Killip class or an anterior myocardial infarction). Even though it is not universally accepted, in our opinion, this strategy should be implemented in a pre-hospital setting (in an ambulance) or as soon as possible when arriving at the hospital (at the Emergency Room or Coronary Care Unit, irrespective of whether they are in spoke or hub hospitals). A new, second-generation GP IIb–IIIa inhibitor (zalunfiban) appears to be highly suitable as a pre-hospital pharmacological facilitation strategy at the time of first medical contact due to its favourable features, including its simple subcutaneous administration, rapid onset of action (15 min), and limited time of action (with a half-life of ~1 h), which is likely to minimize the risk of bleeding. The ongoing CELEBRATE trial, including 2499 STEMI patients, may potentially provide compelling data to support the upstream treatment of STEMI patients undergoing mechanical reperfusion. In fact, although the current therapeutic target of increased rates of timely reperfusion has been achieved, the future goal in myocardial infarction treatment should be to achieve the most rapid reperfusion prior to primary percutaneous coronary intervention, thus further minimizing myocardial damage, or, in some cases, even preventing it completely, and improving survival.

Funder

U.S. National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute

U.S. National Center for Advancing Translational Science

Publisher

MDPI AG

Reference244 articles.

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