Abstract

Previous studies have demonstrated a prolongation of activated clotting times (ACT) with abciximab administration during percutaneous coronary interventions (PCI). The impact of the short acting glycoprotein (GP) IIb-IIIa inhibitor, eptifibatide, on ACT measurements has not been studied. Seventy consecutive patients undergoing PCI in the setting of eptifibatide administration were prospectively enrolled in a single center study. Eptifibatide was administered as two 180 microg/kg boluses 10 minutes apart followed by a continuous infusion of 2.0 microg/kg/min. In 15 patients (Group I), the initial eptifibatide and heparin boluses were separated by 5 minutes, and ACT's were assessed after each bolus as well as at 3 subsequent time points. In 55 patients (Group II), an ACT level was drawn 10 minutes after the initial heparin/eptifibatide bolus and 20 minutes following the second eptifibatide bolus. Two different ACT measuring devices--CoaguChek Pro DM and Hemochron 801--were used to examine the impact of eptifibatide on ACT values. The devices differed in the reproducibility of their measurements, but the overall trends were consistent with both devices. The ACT value was unchanged after the initial eptifibatide bolus (with a delta of 0.6 seconds by CoaguChek Pro DM and 4.2 seconds by Hemochron). While the ACT value rose significantly after the heparin bolus, the second eptifibatide bolus did not result in any further rise in ACT values. Unlike abciximab, eptifibatide does not significantly prolong the ACT in patients undergoing PCI. This may have implications regarding the need for separate heparin dosing algorithms for patients undergoing PCI in the setting of different GPIIb-IIIa inhibitors.

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