Cangrelor versus crushed ticagrelor in patients with acute myocardial infarction and cardiogenic shock: rationale and design of the randomised, double-blind DAPT-SHOCK-AMI trial

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Authors

MOTOVSKA Zuzana HLINOMAZ Ota MROZEK Jan KALA Petr GEISLER Tobias HROMADKA Milan AKIN Ibrahim PRECEK Jan KETTNER Jiri CERVINKA Pavel MONTALESCOT Gilles JARKOVSKÝ Jiří BELOHLAVEK Jan BIS Josef MATEJKA Jan VODZINSKA Alexandra MUZAFAROVA Tamilla TOMASOV Pavol SCHEE Alexander BARTUS Stanislav ANDRASOVA Andrea OLIVIER Christoph B KOVARIK Ales OSTADAL Petr DEMLOVÁ Regina SOUČKOVÁ Lenka VULEV Ivan COUFAL Zdenek KOCHMAN Janusz MARINOV Iuri KUBICA Jacek DUCROCQ Gregory KARPISEK Michal KLIMSA Zdenek HUDEC Martin WIDIMSKY Petr BHATT Deepak L

Year of publication 2024
Type Article in Periodical
Magazine / Source Eurointervention
MU Faculty or unit

Faculty of Medicine

Citation
web DAPT-SHOCK AMI
Doi http://dx.doi.org/10.4244/EIJ-D-24-00203
Keywords adjunctive pharmacotherapy; cardiogenic shock; clinical trials; STEMI
Description Cardiogenic shock (CS) is a devastating and fatal complication of acute myocardial infarction (AMI). CS can affect the pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of medications. The unique properties of cangrelor make it the optimal P2Y12 inhibitor for CS-AMI, in terms of both efficacy and safety. The DAPT-SHOCK-AMI trial (ClinicalTrials. gov: NCT03551964; EudraCT: 2018-002161-19) will assess the benefits of cangrelor in patients with an initial CS-AMI undergoing primary angioplasty. This randomised, multicentre, placebo-controlled trial of approximately 550 patients (with an allowed 10% increase) in 5 countries using a double-blind design will compare initial P2Y12 inhibitor treatment strategies in patients with CS-AMI of (A) intravenous cangrelor and (B) ticagrelor administered as crushed tablets at a loading dose of 180 mg. The primary clinical endpoint is a composite of all-cause death, myocardial infarction (MI), or stroke within 30 days. The main secondary endpoints are (1) the net clinical endpoint, defined as death, MI, urgent revascularisation of the infarct-related artery, stroke, or major bleeding as defined by the Bleeding Academic Research Consortium criteria; (2) cardiovascular-related death, MI, urgent revascularisation, or heart failure; (3) heart failure; and (4) cardiovascular-related death, all (1-4) within 1 year after study enrolment. A platelet reactivity study that tests the laboratory antiplatelet benefits of cangrelor, when given in addition to standard antiplatelet therapy, will be conducted using vasodilator-stimulated phosphoprotein phosphorylation. The primary laboratory endpoints are the periprocedural rate of onset and the proportion of patients who achieve effective P2Y12 inhibition. The DAPT-SHOCK-AMI study is the first randomised trial to evaluate the benefits of cangrelor in patients with CS-AMI.
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