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| Research article summary (published 31 Aug 2008): |
Dose effect of clopidogrel reloading in patients already on 75-mg maintenance dose: the Reload with Clopidogrel Before Coronary Angioplasty in Subjects Treated Long Term with Dual Antiplatelet Therapy (RELOAD) study.
Full Abstract
BACKGROUND: Clopidogrel loading has mostly been studied in clopidogrel-naïve patients. Whether clopidogrel-treated patients readmitted for an acute coronary syndrome or percutaneous coronary intervention can benefit from a new load of clopidogrel and at what dose remain unknown. Our aim was to evaluate the impact of 3 different strategies of administration of a loading dose of 900 mg clopidogrel in patients already treated with a maintenance dose of 75 mg clopidogrel for at least 7 days on residual platelet aggregation. METHODS AND RESULTS: Patients treated long term by clopidogrel 75 mg/d were assigned to receive a first loading dose of 300, 600, or 900 mg clopidogrel and 4 hours later a second loading dose of 600, 300, or 0 mg, respectively, to achieve a total loading dose of 900 mg in all patients. Platelet aggregation was evaluated at baseline, at 4 hours after the initial load (and before second load), and at 24 hours using light transmission aggregometry with 20 micromol ADP and the point-of-care assay VerifyNow P2Y(12). The primary objective of the study was to evaluate the inhibition (relative change) of residual platelet aggregation (percentage of IRPA) between 600- and 900-mg first loading at 4 hours. IRPA at 24 hours also was evaluated as a secondary objective, as well as the rate of suboptimal response at 4 hours defined as IRPA <10%. We included 166 consecutive patients with acute coronary syndromes (n=80, 48%) or stable coronary artery disease (n=86, 52%). Baseline characteristics were similar in the 3 dose groups. A significant stepwise increase was found in percentage IRPA assessed at 4 hours in patients initially assigned to 300 versus 600 versus 900 mg (30.7% versus 40.3% versus 64.0%, respectively; P=0.0024). The difference in percentage IRPA at 4 hours was not significant between 300 and 600 mg but was significant between 600 and 900 mg and between 300 and 900 mg. Percentage IRPA assessed at 24 hours when all patients had received 900 mg did not differ between the 3 loading regimens. The rates of suboptimal response (IRPA <10% at 4 hours) were 23.6%, 20.4%, and 5.3% with 300, 600, and 900 mg, respectively (P=0.02 for all). CONCLUSIONS: In patients treated long term with 75 mg clopidogrel, a new loading dose of 900 mg improves IRPA and reduces poor and/or slow response to clopidogrel significantly more than that obtained with 300 or 600 mg.
Author information
Author/s: Collet, Jean-Philippe (JP); Silvain, Johanne (J); Landivier, Antoine (A); Tanguy, Marie-Laure (ML); Cayla, Guillaume (G); Bellemain, Anne (A); Vignolles, Nicolas (N); Gallier, Sophie (S); Beygui, Farzin (F); Pena, Ana (A); Montalescot, Gilles (G);
Affiliation: Institut de Cardiologie, Unité INSERM 856, Pitié-Salpêtrière University Hospital (AP-HP), Paris, France.
Journal and publication information
Publication Type: Comparative Study; Controlled Clinical Trial; Journal Article; Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
Journal: Circulation (Circulation), published in United States. (Language: eng)
Reference: 2008-Sep; vol 118 (issue 12) : pp 1225-33
Dates: Created 2008/09/16; Completed 2008/10/09; Revised 2008/10/14;
PMID: 18765393, status: MEDLINE (last retrieval date: 2/18/2009, IMS Date: )
Sourced from the National Library of Medicine. Abstract text and other information may be subject to copyright.
Comments and Corrections
CommentIn: Circulation. 2008 Sep 16;118(12):1219-22. (PMID: 18794399)
ErratumIn: Circulation.2008 Oct 14;118(16): e672.
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