Unguided de-escalation from Ticagrelor to Clopidogrel
Unguided de-escalation antiplatelet strategy in stabilized patients with acute myocardial infarction undergoing percutaneous coronary intervention.
Key Takeaway
- In stabilized patients with uncomplicated AMI, an unguided de-escalation DAPT strategy of switching from ticagrelor to clopidogrel met non-inferiority and superiority requirements vs ticagrelor-based continuing standard DAPT, in terms of cardiovascular and bleeding events.
- The de-escalation strategy was associated with a 45% lower risk of net adverse clinical event for the next 11 months vs ticagrelor-based continuing DAPT strategy.
- An absolute risk reduction of 3.6% with de-escalation strategy was mainly caused by a significant decrease in bleeding risk
Why This Matters
- Data on the unguided de-escalation DAPT switching from potent P2Y12 inhibitors to clopidogrel are scarce, but it commonly occurs in clinical practice
- The TALOS-AMI trial assessed the hypothesis that de-escalation DAPT with clopidogrel might be non-inferior to ticagrelor-based antiplatelet therapy.
Study Design
Key inclusion criteria
- Patients with biomarker-positive AMI
- Who underwent successful PCI
- Tolerated aspirin+ticagrelor treatment at admission
- Reported no major adverse ischemic or bleeding events during 1 month after AMI
Key exclusion criteria
- Patients with cardiogenic shock, active bleeding of any major organs, bleeding diathesis/coagulopathy, gastrointestinal/genitourinary bleeding, and hemoptysis within 2 months
Study Outcomes
Primary endpoint:
Net adverse clinical event* from 1–12 months after index PCI
Key secondary endpoints:
- Composite of cardiovascular death, MI, and stroke;
- Composite of BARC bleeding type 2, 3, or 5;
- Composite of cardiovascular death, MI, stroke, and BARC bleeding type 3 or 5 between 1 and 12 months after index PCI
Key Results
Randomization: 2,697 patients assigned† to
(1) De-escalation group (n = 1,349) or
(2) Active control group (n = 1,348)
Primary endpoint (de-escalation vs active control group)
4.6% vs 8.2% patients
(P non-inferiority <0.001; HR = 0.55, P superiority = 0.0001)
De-escalation group met non-inferiority and superiority requirements vs
active control group
Key secondary endpoints (de-escalation vs active control group) | |
Composite of cardiovascular death, MI, and stroke | 2.1% vs 3.1% patients (HR = 0.69, P = 0.15) |
Composite of BARC bleeding type 2, 3, or 5 | 3.0% vs 5.6% patients (HR = 0·52, P = 0·0012) |
Composite of cardiovascular death, MI, stroke, and BARC bleeding 3 or 5 | 2.8% vs 4.9% patients (HR = 0.58, P = 0.0086) |
Limitations
- Open-label and non-placebo-controlled trial
- Non-inferiority margin seemed to be wide‡§
- Platelet function test or genotyping was not carried out during the study
- Inclusion of less severe BARC type 2 bleeding in a net clinical outcome might bias results in favor of de-escalation group
- De-escalation strategy may not apply to patients with AMI with multivessel disease/complex lesions
*A composite of cardiovascular death, MI, stroke, and bleeding type 2, 3, or 5 according to the BARC criteria.
†At 1 month after index PCI.
‡HR 1.34.
§The study should be interpreted with caution, especially in patients at high cardiovascular risk.
Abbreviations
AMI, acute myocardial infarction; BARC, Bleeding Academic Research Consortium; DAPT, dual anti-platelet therapy; HR, hazard ratio; MI, myocardial infarction; PCI, percutaneous coronary intervention; TALOS-AMI,Ticagrelor versus Clopidogrel in Stabilized Patients with Acute Myocardial Infarction.
Reference
- Kim CJ, Park MW, Kim MC, Choo EH, Hwang BH, Lee KY, et al. Unguided de-escalation from ticagrelor to clopidogrel in stabilised patients with acute myocardial infarction undergoing percutaneous coronary intervention (TALOS-AMI): an investigatorinitiated, open-label, multicentre, non-inferiority, randomised trial. Lancet. 2021;398(10308):1305-1316. doi: 10.1016/S0140- 6736(21)01445-8. PMID: 34627490.