Abstract
The clinical safety and efficacy of clopidogrel reloading in patients receiving long-term clopidogrel therapy who present with acute coronary syndromes and undergo percutaneous coronary intervention have not yet been evaluated. The study cohort comprised 1,368 consecutive patients receiving long-term clopidogrel therapy (75 mg/day) who had presented with acute coronary syndromes and underwent coronary artery stent implantation. In total, 926 patients were given a 600-mg clopidogrel loading dose (reload cohort) before cardiac catheterization, while 442 patients were not reloaded (no-reload cohort). Patients who had presented with cardiogenic shock or stable angina were excluded. The 2 cohorts were well matched for the conventional risk factors for coronary artery disease. The analyzed clinical end points of death (1.1% vs 0.9%, p = 0.77), death or Q-wave myocardial infarction (0.9% vs 0.9%, p = 1.0), target lesion revascularization (0.2% vs 0.8%, p = 0.45), target vessel revascularization (1.1% vs 1.1%, p = 1.0), and major adverse cardiac events (2.0% vs 1.8%, p = 0.8) were similar between the no-reload and reload groups at 30 days. The in-hospital rates of major bleeding and gastrointestinal bleeding were also similar between the 2 cohorts. There were no cases of definite stent thrombosis. In conclusion, patients receiving long-term clopidogrel therapy who present with acute coronary syndromes do not gain any clinical benefit from additional reloading with clopidogrel.
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