Smart-choice trial_P2Y12 inhibitor monotherapy in complex PCI
P2y12 inhibitor monotherapy following short-term dual antiplatelet therapy in complex percutaneous coronary intervention: a post-hoc analysis of smart-choice trial.
In patients with complex percutaneous coronary interventions (PCIs), P2Y12 inhibitor monotherapy, mostly clopidogrel, following short-term dual antiplatelet therapy (DAPT) did not increase ischemic events compared with 12 months of DAPT.
Key Takeaway
- At 1 year, patients with complex PCIs had a higher risk of ischemic events and similar risk of bleeding events than those with non-complex PCIs.
- P2Y12 inhibitor monotherapy, mostly with clopidogrel, following 3 months of DAPT resulted in favorable ischemic outcomes comparable to the standard 12 months of DAPT for complex PCIs.
Why This Matters
- It remains uncertain whether P2Y12 monotherapy, especially clopidogrel, following short-term DAPT is associated with favorable outcomes in patients with complex PCI.
- This post-hoc analysis of SMART-CHOICE trial investigated the efficacy and safety of P2Y12 inhibitor monotherapy, mostly clopidogrel (78%), following short-term DAPT vs 12 months of DAPT in complex PCI.
Study Design
- This was a post-hoc analysis of the SMART-CHOICE trial (NCT02079194), a multicenter, prospective open-label randomized clinical trial:
- Patients were allocated to two groups before PCI: (1) DAPT (aspirin + P2Y12 inhibitor) for 3 months, followed by 9 months of P2Y12 inhibitor monotherapy (2) DAPT for 12 months
- Complex PCI was defined by at least one of the following features:
- 3 vessels treated, ≥3 stents implanted, ≥3 lesions treated, bifurcation PCI with ≥2 stents implanted, and a total stent length of ≥60 mm
- Primary efficacy endpoint included major adverse cardiac and cerebrovascular event (MACCE), defined as the composite of all-cause death, myocardial infarction, or stroke at 12 months after the index procedure.
- Primary safety endpoint included bleeding defined as Bleeding Academic Research Consortium (BARC) types 2–5 at 12 months after the index procedure.
Key Results
- A total of 2,993 patients at 33 hospitals were randomized including 498 treated with complex PCIs and 2,495 undergoing non-complex PCIs
- 76.3% (380/498) underwent complex PCIs and 83.8% (1961/2495) non-complex PCIs were exposed to clopidogrel-based therapy
- At 1 year, compared to the non-complex PCIs group, patients in the complex PCI group had higher rates of MACCE (4.0% versus 2.3%; hazard ratio [HR] = 1.74; 95% confidence interval [CI]: 1.05–2.89, P = 0.033), all-cause death (2.6% versus 1.0%, HR = 2.52, 95% CI: 1.30–4.90, P = 0.007), cardiac death (1.6% versus 0.6%, HR = 2.51, 95% CI: 1.08–5.88, P = 0.033), and stent thrombosis (0.6% versus 0.1%, HR = 7.53, 95% CI: 1.26–45.06, P = 0.027).BARC types 2–5 bleeding showed similar rates in both the groups (2.6% versus 2.6%, HR = 1.02; 95% CI: 0.56–1.86, P = 0.939).
- Effects of DAPT and P2Y12 inhibitor monotherapy in the complex and non-complex PCI groups
- In non-complex PCI
- MACCE rates: P2Y12 monotherapy showed similar MACCE rates compared with the DAPT group (2.6% versus 2.1%; HR = 1.27; 95% CI: 0.76–2.14; P = 0.359)
- Bleeding BARC type 2–5: Significantly lower in P2Y12 group than DAPT group (1.9% versus 3.3%; HR = 0.57; 95% CI: 0.34–0.96; P = 0.033)
- In complex PCI
- MACCE rates: Similar in both groups (3.8% versus 4.2%; HR = 0.92; 95% CI: 0.38–2.21; P = 0.853)
- Bleeding BARC type 2–5: lower in P2Y12 monotherapy group than DAPT group without statistical significance (1.9% versus 3.4%; HR = 0.58; 95% CI: 0.19–1.77; P = 0.340)
- In non-complex PCI
- The interaction was not statistically significant between complex and non-complex PCI groups with MACCE (Pinteraction = 0.483) and BARC bleeding types 2–5 (Pinteraction = 0.904).
Limitations
- This study on complex PCI was not pre-specified in the protocol, and thus the findings must only be interpreted as hypothesis-generating.
- Complexity of coronary anatomy and lesions were not reviewed by an angiographic core laboratory but were site-reported.
- P2Y12 inhibitor monotherapy was associated with fewer bleeding events in complex PCI without statistical significance due to type II error associated with a small sample size.
- These findings cannot be generalized to Western patients because all study participants were East Asians.
Reference
- Roh JW, Hahn JY, Oh JH, Chun WJ, Park YH, Jang WJ, et al. P2Y12 inhibitor monotherapy in complex percutaneous coronary intervention: A post-hoc analysis of SMART-CHOICE randomized clinical trial. Cardiol J. 2021. doi:10.5603/CJ.a2021.0101. Epub ahead of print. PMID: 34523115.
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