Abstract

ABSTRACT Introduction Platelets play a key role in arterial thrombosis and antiplatelet therapy is pivotal in the treatment of cardiovascular disease. Current antiplatelet drugs target different pathways of platelet activation and show specific pharmacodynamic and pharmacokinetic characteristics, implicating clinically relevant drug–drug interactions. Areas covered This article reviews the role of platelets in hemostasis and cardiovascular thrombosis, and discusses the key pharmacodynamics, drug–drug interactions and reversal strategies of clinically used antiplatelet drugs. Expert opinion Antiplatelet therapies target distinct pathways of platelet activation: thromboxane A2 synthesis, adenosine diphosphate-mediated signaling, integrin αIIbβ3 (GPIIb/IIIa), thrombin-mediated platelet activation via the PAR1 receptor and phosphodiesterases. Key clinical drug–drug interactions of antiplatelet agents involve acetylsalicylic acid – ibuprofen, clopidogrel – omeprazole, and morphine – oral P2Y12 inhibitors, all of which lead to an attenuated antiplatelet effect. Platelet function and genetic testing and the use of scores (ARC-HBR, PRECISE-DAPT, ESC ischemic risk definition) may contribute to a more tailored antiplatelet therapy. High on-treatment platelet reactivity presents a key problem in the acute management of ST-elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI). A treatment strategy involving early initiation of an intravenous antiplatelet agent may be able to bridge the gap of insufficient platelet inhibition in high ischemic risk patients with STEMI.

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