Myocardial Infarction Clinical Trial
Official title:
ETAMI-Study: Early Thienopyridine Treatment to Improve Primary Percutaneous Coronary Intervention in Patients With Acute Myocardial Infarction
Acute myocardial infarction is generally caused by a thrombotic occlusion of coronary arteries. Primary aim of early therapy is a fast and complete reperfusion of the infarcted myocardium.
This could be achieved by either thrombolytic therapy or primary Percutaneous coronary
intervention (PCI).
Comparison of the different therapies in randomized trials shows an advantage of primary PCI
regarding rates of recanalisation of the infarct vessel, preservation of left ventricular
(LV) function, and reduction in the rate of reinfarctions. In addition, the in-hospital
mortality is lower in patients undergoing primary PCI. Nevertheless, primary PCI does not
always result in a successful reperfusion despite of successful restoration of blood flow in
the epicardial infarct related artery.
Effective platelet inhibition is a cornerstone of therapy in patients with STEMI. In the
ISIS-2 study acetylsalicylic acid (ASA) has been shown to improve short- and long-term
clinical outcome in the same extent as fibrinolysis with streptokinase. Dual platelet
inhibition with ASA and a thienopyridine has been repeatedly demonstrated to be more
effective than ASA alone. Clopidogrel on top of ASA improved outcome in patients with acute
coronary syndromes with and without PCI in the CURE study. Furthermore, a loading dose of
300 mg clopidogrel was advantageous in elective PCI in the CREDO trial and the addition of
clopidogrel to ASA improved the patency rate of the infarct related artery in patients with
STEMI undergoing fibrinolysis. In the BRAVE 3 study, the addition of abciximab to a
background therapy of a high loading dose of 600 mg clopidogrel plus ASA did not result in
an additional clinical benefit in terms of prevention of ischemic complications in primary
elective PCI, suggesting a near optimal platelet inhibition with this treatment in primary
PCI. The advantage of a 600 mg loading dose seems mainly related to the more rapid onset of
the full antiplatelet effect within 2-4 hours as compared to 6-8 hours after 300 mg.
However, in patients with STEMI scheduled for primary PCI an earlier effective inhibition of
ADP-induced platelet aggregation, preferably within 60-90 min after administration of the
drug, is needed.
The new thienopyridine prasugrel has been shown to achieve a more complete and even more
rapid platelet inhibition compared to clopidogrel. This might be especially important in
patients with STEMI scheduled for primary PCI. In these patients activation of platelets is
more pronounced compared to patients undergoing PCI for stable CAD.
In a small substudy of the TRITON-TIMI 38 trial inhibition of platelet aggregation measured
with the VASP assay was more effective with prasugrel than with clopidogrel. However, this
substudy was done predominantly in patients with unstable angina and NSTEMI. In addition,
none of these patients were treated in the pre-hospital phase. Therefore it is necessary to
determine if in patients with acute STEMI an early administration of a high loading dose of
prasugrel in comparison with clopidogrel before planned primary PCI improves the inhibition
of platelet aggregation, therefore facilitates this procedure and results in an improved
myocardial reperfusion before and after PCI.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Safety/Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Double Blind (Subject, Caregiver, Investigator, Outcomes Assessor), Primary Purpose: Treatment
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