Coronary Artery Disease Clinical Trial
Official title:
Study of the Potentiation of the Effects of Clopidogrel by Rifampicin in Healthy Volunteers
The principal research question is: Can platelet P2Y12 receptor blockade by the
antithrombotic drug clopidogrel be significantly enhanced by coadministration of the
antibiotic rifampicin?
Clopidogrel is an antithrombotic drug in clinical use that reduces the risk of heart attack
and coronary stent thrombosis. However some patients respond poorly to clopidogrel, at least
partly because they fail to convert it effectively to its active form, and consequently are
at higher risk of arterial thrombosis. Preliminary evidence indicates that the antibiotic
rifampicin enhances the effectiveness of clopidogrel by increasing its conversion to its
active form by the liver. We wish to study further the extent of rifampicin's effect on
clopidogrel to see whether this might be useful in clinical practice.
Clopidogrel is an antithrombotic drug that is licensed for the treatment and prevention of
arterial thrombosis, such as in people admitted to hospital with heart attacks. However,
some people fail to achieve a substantial antithrombotic effect from the drug and one
important reason for this is that their livers do not convert clopidogrel to its active form
effectively. Current evidence suggests that these people are less protected by clopidogrel
and have a higher risk of arterial thrombosis than those who respond well to clopidogrel.
Rifampicin is an antibiotic that increases the activity of liver enzymes that convert
clopidogrel to its active form and preliminary evidence indicates that it increases the
effectiveness of clopidogrel. This raises the possibility that rifampicin might be used with
clopidogrel to increase its clinical effectiveness. We wish to study this interaction
further.
12 healthy volunteers will be recruited for this study after giving informed consent.
Following Screening, the study will run over 28 days. Lab safety (clinical chemistry,
haematology and urinalysis) will be undertaken on days 7, 22 and 28 in addition to
screening. During the first visit, an intravenous cannula will be inserted into a forearm
vein. Subjects will perform an erythromycin breath test. Subsequently, venous blood will be
obtained via the intravenous cannula and platelet function studies will be performed and a
plasma sample will be stored for baseline metabolite analysis. Subsequently the subjects
will be administered a 600 mg loading dose of clopidogrel (Plavix, Sanofi Pharma
Bristol−Myers Squibb) and further blood samples will be taken over 4 hours for clopidogrel
metabolite analysis and platelet function studies. Subjects will then take clopidogrel 75 mg
daily for a further 6 days and, 4 hours after the last dose, a further blood sample will be
taken using venepuncture for platelet function studies and a plasma sample. After a washout
period of 7 days, subjects will then start rifampicin 300 mg twice daily for 14 days
(Rifadin, Aventis Pharma). On the 8th day of taking rifampicin, a further intravenous
cannula will be inserted, the erythromycin breath test will be repeated, as above, and the
same regimen of clopidogrel administration and blood testing will be repeated, this time
with co−administration of rifampicin.
The data obtained will allow the following assessments: (i) comparison of the early effects
of a 600 mg clopidogrel loading dose and late effects of clopidogrel after 7 days on
platelet aggregation and receptor blockade; (ii) assessment of the effects of rifampicin on
clopidogrel's action on platelet aggregation and receptor blockade following a loading dose
and after prolonged administration of clopidogrel.
;
Endpoint Classification: Pharmacokinetics/Dynamics Study, Intervention Model: Single Group Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Basic Science
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