Steinberg Daniel H, Shah Palak, Kinnaird Tim, Pinto Slottow Tina L, Roy Probal K, Okabe Teruo, Bonello Laurent, de Labriolle Axel, Smith Kimberly A, Torguson Rebecca, Xue Zhenyi, Suddath William O, Kent Kenneth M, Satler Lowell F, Pichard Augusto D, Lindsay Joseph, Waksman Ron
Division of Cardiology, Washington Hospital Center, Washington, DC, USA.
Am J Cardiol. 2008 Jul 15;102(2):160-4. doi: 10.1016/j.amjcard.2008.03.030. Epub 2008 May 28.
For patients undergoing elective percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI), procedural anticoagulation with bivalirudin was previously shown to significantly reduce bleeding complications at the cost of a modest increase in ischemic events compared with unfractionated heparin (UFH) and glycoprotein IIb/IIIa inhibitors (GPIs). However, the excess bleeding in patients treated with UFH and GPIs may have been caused by excessively high UFH doses and increased activated clotting times. This study sought to determine the bleeding risk of targeted low-dose UFH with GPIs compared with bivalirudin in patients undergoing elective PCI. Of 1,205 patients undergoing elective PCI, 602 underwent PCI with adjunctive UFH and GPIs with the UFH dose targeted to an activated clotting time of approximately 250 seconds, and 603 patients matched for baseline characteristics underwent PCI with bivalirudin. Outcomes were analyzed for major bleeding (hematocrit decrease >15%, gastrointestinal bleed, or major hematoma) and 6-month major adverse cardiac events (death, myocardial infarction, and target-lesion revascularization). The maximum activated clotting time achieved was 261.7 +/- 61.6 seconds in the UFH/GPI group and 355.4 +/- 66.6 in the bivalirudin group (p <0.001). In-hospital major bleeding rates were similar between groups (1.8% UFH/GPI vs 1.7% bivalirudin; p = 0.83), as were transfusion requirements (1.2% UFH/GPI vs 0.5% bivalirudin; p = 0.61). The 6-month major adverse cardiac event rate was also similar between groups (9.5% UFH/GPI vs 9.0% bivalirudin; p = 0.81). In conclusion, there were no significant differences in major bleeding and 6-month major adverse cardiac events for patients undergoing elective PCI treated with targeted low-dose UFH and GPIs compared with those treated with bivalirudin.
对于接受择期经皮冠状动脉介入治疗(PCI)的患者,与普通肝素(UFH)和糖蛋白IIb/IIIa抑制剂(GPI)相比,此前研究表明使用比伐卢定进行术中抗凝可显著降低出血并发症,但代价是缺血事件略有增加。然而,接受UFH和GPI治疗的患者出现过量出血可能是由于UFH剂量过高以及活化凝血时间延长所致。本研究旨在确定择期PCI患者中,与比伐卢定相比,使用低剂量靶向UFH联合GPI的出血风险。在1205例接受择期PCI的患者中,602例接受PCI并辅助使用UFH和GPI,UFH剂量靶向活化凝血时间约为250秒,603例基线特征匹配的患者接受比伐卢定PCI治疗。分析主要出血(血细胞比容降低>15%、胃肠道出血或重大血肿)和6个月主要不良心脏事件(死亡、心肌梗死和靶病变血运重建)的结局。UFH/GPI组达到的最大活化凝血时间为261.7±61.6秒,比伐卢定组为355.4±66.6秒(p<0.001)。两组的院内主要出血率相似(UFH/GPI组为1.8%,比伐卢定组为1.7%;p = 0.83),输血需求也相似(UFH/GPI组为1.2%,比伐卢定组为0.5%;p = 0.61)。两组的6个月主要不良心脏事件发生率也相似(UFH/GPI组为9.5%,比伐卢定组为9.0%;p = 0.81)。总之,与接受比伐卢定治疗的患者相比,接受低剂量靶向UFH联合GPI治疗的择期PCI患者在主要出血和6个月主要不良心脏事件方面无显著差异。