作者
Marco Valgimigli,Alessandro Spirito,Samantha Sartori,Dominick J. Angiolillo,Pascal Vranckx,José M. de la Torre Hernández,Mitchell W. Krucoff,Sripal Bangalore,Deepak L. Bhatt,Gianluca Campo,Davide Cao,Bassem Chehab,James W. Choi,Yihan Feng,Junbo Ge,James Hermiller,Vijay Kunadian,Sydney Lupo,Raj Makkar,Aziz Maksoud,Franz‐Josef Neumann,Héctor Picón,Shigeru Saito,Gennaro Sardella,Holger Thiele,Ralph Töelg,Olivier Varenne,Birgit Vogel,Yujie Zhou,Stephan Windecker,Roxana Mehran
摘要
The optimal duration of dual antiplatelet therapy (DAPT) after percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) in patients on long-term oral anticoagulation (OAC) therapy is still uncertain.The aim of this analysis was to assess the effects of 1- vs 3-month DAPT in patients with and those without concomitant OAC included in the XIENCE Short DAPT program.The XIENCE Short DAPT program enrolled patients with high bleeding risk who underwent successful PCI with a cobalt-chromium everolimus-eluting stent. DAPT was discontinued at 1 or 3 months in patients free from ischemic events and adherent to treatment. The effect of 1- vs 3-month DAPT was compared in patients with and those without OAC using propensity score stratification. The primary endpoint was all-cause death or any myocardial infarction (MI). The key secondary endpoint was Bleeding Academic Research Consortium (BARC) types 2 to 5 bleeding. Outcomes were assessed from 1 to 12 months after index PCI.Among 3,364 event-free patients, 1,462 (43%) were on OAC. Among OAC patients, the risk for death or MI was similar between 1- and 3-month DAPT (7.4% vs 8.8%; adjusted HR: 0.74; 95% CI: 0.49-1.11; P = 0.139), whereas BARC types 2 to 5 bleeding was lower with 1-month DAPT (adjusted HR: 0.71; 95% CI: 0.51-0.99; P = 0.046). These effects were consistent in patients with and those without OAC (P for interaction = NS).Between 1 and 12 months after PCI, 1-month compared with 3-month DAPT was associated with similar rates of all-cause death or MI and a reduced rate of BARC types 2 to 5 bleeding, irrespective of OAC treatment.