Aspirin Monotherapy vs No Antiplatelet Therapy in Stable Patients With Coronary Stents Undergoing Low-to-Intermediate Risk Noncardiac Surgery
- Author(s)
- Do-Yoon Kang; Sang-Hyup Lee; Se-Whan Lee; Cheol Hyun Lee; Choongki Kim; Ji-Yong Jang; Nihar Mehta; Jun-Hyok Oh; Young Rak Cho; Kyung Ho Yoon; Sung Gyun Ahn; Jung-Hee Lee; Deok-Kyu Cho; Yongcheol Kim; Jeongsu Kim; Gyeong Hun Cho; Kyu-Sup Lee; Hanbit Park; Mutlu Vural; Young-Hyo Lim; Kyoung-Ha Park; Bong-Ki Lee; Jong-Young Lee; Hyun-Woo Park; Yong-Hoon Yoon; Jae-Hwan Lee; Seung-Yul Lee; Kyung Woo Park; Jeehoon Kang; Hyun Kuk Kim; Si-Hyuck Kang; Jae-Hyoung Park; In-Cheol Choi; Chang Sik Yu; Sung-Cheol Yun; Duk-Woo Park; Myeong-Ki Hong; Seung-Jung Park; Jung-Sun Kim; Jung-Min Ahn
- Keimyung Author(s)
- Lee, Cheol Hyun
- Department
- Dept. of Internal Medicine (내과학)
- Journal Title
- J Am Coll Cardiol
- Issued Date
- 2024
- Volume
- 84
- Issue
- 24
- Keyword
- antiplatelet therapy; aspirin; coronary artery disease; drug-eluting stent; noncardiac surgery
- Abstract
- Background:
Current guidelines recommend the perioperative continuation of aspirin in patients with coronary drug-eluting stents (DES) undergoing noncardiac surgery. However, supporting evidence is limited.
Objectives:
This study aimed to compare continuing aspirin monotherapy vs temporarily holding all antiplatelet therapy before noncardiac surgery in patients with previous DES implantation.
Methods:
We randomly assigned patients who had received a DES >1 year previously and were undergoing elective noncardiac surgery either to continue aspirin or to discontinue all antiplatelet agents 5 days before noncardiac surgery. Antiplatelet therapy was recommended to be resumed no later than 48 hours after surgery, unless contraindicated. The primary outcome was a composite of death from any cause, myocardial infarction, stent thrombosis, or stroke between 5 days before and 30 days after noncardiac surgery.
Results:
A total of 1,010 patients underwent randomization. Among 926 patients in the modified intention-to-treat population (462 patients in aspirin monotherapy group and 464 patients in the no-antiplatelet therapy group), the primary composite outcome occurred in 3 patients (0.6%) in the aspirin monotherapy group and 4 patients (0.9%) in the no antiplatelet group (difference, −0.2 percentage points; 95% CI: −1.3 to 0.9; P > 0.99). There was no stent thrombosis in either group. The incidence of major bleeding did not differ significantly between groups (6.5% vs 5.2%; P = 0.39), whereas minor bleeding was significantly more frequent in the aspirin group (14.9% vs 10.1%; P = 0.027).
Conclusions:
Among patients undergoing low-to-intermediate risk noncardiac surgery >1 year after stent implantation primarily with a DES, in the setting of lower-than-expected event rates, we failed to identify a significant difference between perioperative aspirin monotherapy and no antiplatelet therapy with respect to ischemic outcomes or major bleeding. (Perioperative Antiplatelet Therapy in Patients With Drug-eluting Stent Undergoing Noncardiac Surgery
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