Affiliation:
1. From the Center for Platelet Function Studies, Departments of Pediatrics and Medicine, University of Massachusetts Medical School, Worcester (A.L.F., Y.L., M.D.L., M.R.B., M.L.F., M.I.F., A.D.M.); Center for Platelet Research Studies, Division of Hematology/Oncology, Children’s Hospital Boston, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Mass (A.L.F., M.R.B., A.D.M.); Siemens Healthcare Diagnostics, Newark, Del (D.J.C.); and South Shore Hospital, South Weymouth, Mass (M.I.F.). Dr Linden is currently affiliated...
Abstract
Background—
Poor clinical outcome in aspirin-treated patients has been termed
aspirin resistance
and may result from inadequate inhibition of platelet cyclooxygenase-1 (COX-1) by aspirin. The objectives of this study were to determine prospectively whether COX-1-dependent and other platelet function assays correlate with clinical outcomes in aspirin-treated patients.
Methods and Results—
Blood was collected before percutaneous coronary intervention from 700 consecutive aspirin-treated (81 or 325 mg for ≥3 days) patients. Platelet function was tested by (1) serum thromboxane B
2
; (2) arachidonic acid-stimulated platelet surface P-selectin and activated glycoprotein IIb/IIIa and leukocyte-platelet aggregates; and (3) platelet function analyzer (PFA)-100 collagen-epinephrine and collagen-ADP closure time (CT). Adverse clinical outcomes of all-cause death, cardiovascular death, and major adverse cardiovascular events (cardiovascular death, myocardial infarction, hospitalization for revascularization, or acute coronary syndrome) were assessed by telephone interview and/or medical record review. Clinical outcomes information was obtained at 24.8±0.3 months after platelet function testing. By univariate analysis, COX-1-dependent assays, including serum thromboxane B
2
level, were not associated with adverse clinical outcomes, whereas the COX-1-independent assay, PFA-100 collagen-ADP CT <65 seconds, was associated with major adverse cardiovascular events (
P
=0.0149). After adjustment for covariables (including sex, aspirin dose, Thrombolysis in Myocardial Infarction risk score, clopidogrel use), both serum thromboxane B
2
>3.1 ng/mL and PFA-100 collagen-ADP CT <65 seconds were associated with major adverse cardiovascular events. In contrast, indirect measures of platelet COX-1 (arachidonic acid-stimulated platelet markers, shortened PFA-100 collagen-epinephrine CT) were not significantly associated with adverse clinical outcomes even after adjustment for covariables.
Conclusions—
In this prospective study of 700 aspirin-treated patients presenting for angiographic evaluation of coronary artery disease, residual platelet COX-1 function measured by serum thromboxane B
2
and COX-1-independent platelet function measured by PFA-100 collagen-ADP CT, but not indirect COX-1-dependent assays (arachidonic acid-stimulated platelet markers, shortened PFA-100 collagen-epinephrine CT), correlate with subsequent major adverse cardiovascular events. This study suggests that multiple mechanisms, including but not confined to inadequate inhibition of COX-1, are responsible for poor clinical outcomes in aspirin-treated patients, and therefore the term
aspirin resistance
is inappropriate.
Publisher
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)
Subject
Physiology (medical),Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine
Cited by
154 articles.
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