| C. Michael Gibson, M.S., M.D. [1] November 4th, 2007
ORLANDO Among patients with acute coronary syndromes (ACS) undergoing PCI, the antiplatelet drug prasugrel reduces the risk of death, MI and stroke compared to clopidogrel, but this comes at the expense of an increase in bleeding. Net clinical benefit (which incorporates both ischemic and bleeding endpoints) was significantly in favor of prasugrel over clopidogrel in the TRITON-TIMI 38 trial presented today at the American Heart Association’s Scientific Sessions 2007.
Antiplatelet therapy has progressively improved over time: Aspirin improved the relative risk of ischemic outcomes over placebo by 20%, clopidogrel further improved the relative risk of ischemic outcomes by another 20% relative to aspirin, and prasugrel has now further improved the relative risk of ischemic outcomes by another 20% relative to clopidogrel. Each successive improvement in efficacy has been accompanied by a modest rise in bleeding.
The addition of clopidogrel to aspirin has been associated with improved outcomes in a variety of studies, most notably the CURE study. When swallowed and absorbed into the bloodstream, clopidogrel is an inactive pro-drug, and requires conversion to the active metabolite in the liver to become an active antiplatelet agent in the bloodstream. Recent research has identified a subpopulation of patients who do not metabolize or convert inactive clopidogrel pro-drug to the active metabolite as well as the rest of the population. These 25% of patients who do not metabolize clopidogrel as well as other patients have been labeled “hyporesponders” or “non-responders”. These “hyporesponders” to clopidogrel have been shown to have higher ischemic event rates when compared to patients who respond well to clopidogrel.
Prasugrel is also a pro-drug but it is converted more consistently to the active metabolite as it is absorbed in the intestine and by red blood cells in the bloodstream. Because it is metabolized more effectively and more rapidly when compared to clopidogrel, prasugrel is associated with more rapid and more potent inhibition of platelets. In cross-over studies, patients who are “hyporesponders” to clopidogrel uniformly respond to prasugrel. TRITON-TIMI 38 was the first large scale trial to test whether more rapid and more potent inhibition of platelet activation by blocking the P2Y12 receptor would yield improved outcomes.
TRITON - TIMI 38, an international, double-blind, phase 3 trial enrolled 13,608 patients with moderate to high-risk ACS who were scheduled to undergo PCI. Participants were randomized at 707 sites in 30 countries.. Patients were given either prasugrel (60 mg as a one-time “loading” dose follwed by a daily 10 mg maintenance dose) or the currently FDA approved dose of clopidogrel (300 mg loading dose and a daily 75 mg maintenance dose) for up to 15 months.
The primary efficacy endpoint (death from cardiovascular causes, heart attack or stroke) was significantly reduced from 12.1% of patients randomized to clopidogrel to 9.9% of patients randomized to prasugrel (HR 0.81[0.73-0.90], P=0.0004) meeting the primary hypothesis of superiority. Significant reductions with prasugrel were observed in stent thrombosis (HR 0.48[0.36-0.64], (HR 0.76 [0.67-.085], P<0.0001) ,urgent target vessel revascularization (HR 0.66 [0.54-0.81], P=0.0001) and recurrent MI (HR 0.76 [0.67-.085], P<0.0001).
Major bleeding was observed in 2.4% of patients randomized to prasugrel and 1.8% of patients randomized to clopidogrel (HR 1.32 [1.03-1.68], P=0.03). The rate of life threatening bleeding was greater in the Prasugrel group (1.4% vs 0.9%, p=0.01), as was the rate of fatal bleeding (0.4% vs 0.1%, p=0.002). Non fatal bleeding trended to be higher with Prasugrel but did not reach statistical significance (1.1% vs 0.9%, HR=1.25, p=0.23).
The balance of efficacy and safety, net clinical benefit (all cause mortality, nonfatal MI, nonfatal stroke, or nonfatal major bleed), significantly favored prasugrel (HR 0.87 [0.79-0.95], P=0.004)
Dr. Antman said, “Although clopidogrel is a highly effective antiplatelet drug, many patients who receive it still have serious ischemic events despite reliably taking the drug. The benefits of the higher degrees of inhibition of platelet aggregation achieved with the doses of prasugel that we tested in TRITON-TIMI 38 represent the latest advance in antiplatelet therapy for patients with an acute coronary syndrome”.
Disclosure: Dr. Gibson was an investigator in the TRITON-TIMI 38 trial and has received research grant support from both Eli Lilly and Sanofi Aventis.
|