Prasugrel for arterial coronary thrombosis.

Link to article at PubMed

Related Articles

Prasugrel for arterial coronary thrombosis.

Drugs Today (Barc). 2009 Feb;45(2):83-91

Authors: Serebruany V, Makarov L

Antiplatelet therapy is the cornerstone of treatment for patients with acute coronary syndrome undergoing percutaneous coronary intervention. Clopidogrel, in combination with aspirin, is associated with improvement in longterm vascular clinical outcomes in these patients and is currently the antiplatelet standard of care. However, a significant number of patients still experience secondary ischemic thrombotic events due to potential insufficient platelet inhibition or noncompliance. Therefore, the development of better and safer antiplatelet agents is of the utmost priority. Indeed, oral antiplatelet agents, such as aspirin in the ISIS-2 study and clopidogrel in the COMMIT mega trial, in moderate doses are among the very few classes of drugs that reduce absolute mortality in patients after acute vascular thrombotic events. Prasugrel (CS-747; LY-640315), an experimental third-generation oral thienopyridine, is a specific, irreversible antagonist of the platelet adenosine diphosphate P2Y(12) receptor. Preclinical and early phase clinical studies have shown that prasugrel has greater antiplatelet potency, lower variability in platelet response and faster onset of inhibition than clopidogrel. However, the doses of the drug chosen for further prasugrel developments are much higher (about 2.5-2.7 times higher) than those of conventional clopidogrel regimen(s). The recent TRITON trial assessed head-to-head prasugrel versus clopidogrel, both in addition to aspirin, and led to numerous controversies with regard to the fairness of the trial design, interpretation of its results, and the suitability of the high maintenance prasugrel dose for chronic preventive human use. We critically review various aspects of prasugrel development, focusing on the discrepancies between the official interpretation of the results and actual findings. We conclude that the benefits of prasugrel are exaggerated and that the risks are underestimated. Very careful maintenance dose selection and a flawless long-term safety profile for the new agents will become the keys to the success of future oral antiplatelet drug development.

PMID: 19343228 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *