https://doi.org/10.55788/b2429ae1
Clopidogrel is a prodrug that has to be converted in the liver to its active metabolite. “Loss-of-function carriers of the CYP2C19*2 or*3 carriers have 40% less antiplatelet activity then non-carriers,” Dr Brenden Ingraham (Mayo Clinic, MN, USA) explained [1]. Therefore, the TAILOR-PCI (NCT01742117) research question was whether identifying loss-of-function CYP2C19 allele carriers and altering P2Y12 inhibitor therapy based on CYP2C19 genotype can reduce ischaemic outcomes.
TAILOR-PCI was a 2 arm, parallel, open-label, international, multicentre, randomised clinical trial including 5,302 adults who underwent PCI and were prescribed at least 12 months of dual antiplatelet therapy. Participants were randomised into 2 groups, a conventional therapy group that received clopidogrel (75 mg daily), or the point-of-care genotype-guided therapy group. In this group, genotype was assessed and CYP2C19*2/e* loss-of-function carriers were treated with 90 mg ticagrelor twice daily; only non-carriers received 75 mg clopidogrel daily. The primary study endpoint was the time-to-first event for a composite of cardiovascular death, myocardial infarction (MI), severe recurrent ischaemia, definite or probable stent thrombosis, and stroke at 122 months.
The trial did not meet its primary endpoint with results for genotype-guided therapy versus standard therapy (P=0.056). However, in a post-hoc, hypothesis-generating, secondary analysis of cumulative endpoints was conducted where all ischaemic and bleeding endpoint within the 12 months were assessed, including recurrent events. A total of 5,276 patients were eligible for this analysis; 1,849 CYP2C19 loss-of-function carriers were analysed. 903 of them were assigned to genotype-guided therapy, another 946 to conventional therapy.
The cumulative incidence of ischaemic events in CYP2C19 loss-of-function carriers was 7% in the conventional therapy compared with 4.5% in the genotype-guided therapy, which translates in a statistically significant 40% reduction in cumulative ischaemic events (HR 0.61; 95% CI 0.41–0.89; P<0.01). Moreover, there was no significant difference in major or minor bleedings between the 2 groups. “Our findings demonstrate the potential clinical utility of a precision medicine approach,” Dr Ingraham concluded.
- Ingraham BS. Genotype-guided oral P1Y12 inhibitor therapy reduces cumulative ischemic events following percutaneous coronary intervention. ESC Congress 2022, Barcelona, Spain, 26–29 August.
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Table of Contents: ESC 2022
Featured articles
ESC Clinical Practice Guidelines
Prevention of VT and sudden cardiac death: the new recommendations
New and first ESC cardio-oncology guideline
The 2022 ESC/ERS guidelines for the diagnosis and treatment of pulmonary hypertension
Cardiovascular assessment and management of patients undergoing non-cardiac surgery
Heart Failure
Old dogs, new tricks: Acetazolamide plus loop diuretics improves decongestion
No effect of neprilysin inhibition on cognition
Dapagliflozin DELIVERs for HFmrEF/HFpEF
Meta-analysis of DELIVER and EMPEROR-Preserved
Anticoagulation
Rheumatic heart disease-associated AF: standard-of-care holds ground
New anticoagulant safe and maybe effective: PACIFIC-AMI and PACIFIC-Stroke outcomes
AXIOMATIC-SSP: Reducing risk of ischaemic stroke with factor XIa inhibition?
Evolving evidence for P2Y12 inhibition in chronic coronary syndromes: PANTHER
Prevention
Danish study suggests starting CVD screening before age 70
Polypill SECUREs win in secondary prevention in elderly
Long-term therapy with evolocumab associated with lower CV mortality
ARBs + beta-blockers may delay Marfan syndrome aortic root replacement
ENTRIGUE: Subcutaneous pegozafermin in severe hypertriglyceridaemia
Artificial Intelligence & Digital Health – What Is New
First RCT evidence for use of AI in daily practice
AI-enhanced echography supports aortic stenosis patients
Ischaemia
Medical therapy versus PCI for ischaemic cardiomyopathy
Allopurinol disappoints in ALL-HEART
Conservative or invasive management for high-risk kidney disease patients with ischaemia?
Genotype-guided antiplatelet therapy in patients receiving PCI
Other HOTLINE Sessions
BOXing out oxygen and blood pressure targets
Coronary CT angiography diagnostics compared head-to-head
High-dose influenza vaccine: mortality benefit?
FFR-guided decision-making in patients with AMI and multivessel disease
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