Abstract

High on-treatment platelet reactivity is an established risk factor for adverse cardiac events in patients taking clopidogrel following percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI). Two hundred patients underwent platelet reactivity testing with VerifyNow P2Y12, vasodilator-stimulated phosphoprotein phosphorylation (VASP), and light transmission aggregometry (LTA) with both 5 and 20 μM of adenosine diphosphate (ADP) following PCI. High on-treatment platelet reactivity was defined as a maximum platelet aggregation ≥46% for LTA ADP 5 μM or ≥60% for 20 μM; platelet reactivity index (PRI) ≥50% for VASP; and platelet reactivity units ≥235 for VerifyNow. Correlation between assays was tested using Spearman coefficients (ρ); agreement among tests in regards to high on-treatment platelet reactivity was evaluated with Kappa statistics (κ). All Spearman correlations had P values <0.001, although ρ ranged from 0.60-0.86. The incidence of high on-treatment platelet reactivity was 39.3% with VASP, 27.3% with VerifyNow, 23.1% with LTA ADP 5 μM, and 16.2% with LTA ADP 20 μM. The strongest correlation was between LTA ADP 5 μM and LTA ADP 20 μM (κ= 0.53, 95% CI 0.37-0.68); the weakest was between VASP and LTA ADP 5 μM (κ= 0.33, 95% CI 0.19-0.47). Overall, the level of agreement between assays was in the moderate to poor range. Despite evidence that the most commonly used tests are correlated, agreement among tests is modest at best and demonstrates they are not interchangeable.

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