Does the combination of reteplase, abciximab, and ticlopidine provide continuous platelet inhibition in patients with acute myocardial infarction?
Flow cytometric monitoring demonstrates that the combination of abciximab and ticlopidine provides fast and continuous platelet inhibition in AMI patients receiving reteplase.
BACKGROUND: Improvement of thrombolysis may be achieved by concomitant strong platelet inhibition. To monitor platelet function in patients with myocardial infarction (n=46) who were treated with the fibrinolytic agent reteplase, the glycoprotein (GP) IIb/IIIa blocker abciximab, and the ADP receptor antagonist ticlopidine, we developed a flow cytometric assay. METHODS AND RESULTS: Binding of abciximab to platelets was directly monitored as the percentage of platelets stained by a goat anti-mouse antibody. Blood drawn 10 minutes and 2 hours after the start of therapy with reteplase and abciximab and during the 12-hour infusion of abciximab demonstrated a maximal blockade of GP IIb/IIIa (10 minutes, 86.2+/-10.3%; 12 hours, 85.8+/-7.1%). Starting at 24 hours, abciximab binding gradually decreased (24 hours, 74.6+/-16.2%; 48 hours, 66.8+/-14.9%; 72 hours, 60.5+/-16.7%; 96 hours, 49.4+/-17.8%; 120 hours, 35.8+/-16. 4%; and 144 hours, 29.9+/-15.3%). Binding of a chicken anti-fibrinogen antibody to platelets, indicating the level of functional blockade of GP IIb/IIIa, was inversely correlated with the binding of abciximab (r=-0.72, P:<0.0001). In blood drawn at 10 minutes, platelet aggregation was maximally inhibited but recovered within 48 hours even if the majority of GP IIb/IIIa receptors were still blocked by abciximab. Reteplase did not influence abciximab binding and did not activate platelets, as measured by P-selectin expression, fibrinogen binding, and platelet aggregation. Platelet inhibition that was achieved during the first 24 hours by abciximab was directly maintained by additional treatment with ticlopidine. CONCLUSIONS: Flow cytometric monitoring of platelet function allows differentiation of the effects of reteplase, abciximab, and ticlopidine. The combination of abciximab and ticlopidine is an attractive therapeutic strategy that provides a fast and continuous platelet inhibition.
Peter et al. (Tue,) studied this question.