Patients undergoing percutaneous coronary interventions (PCI)
Antiplatelet treatment regimens
This State-of-the-Art review summarizes the rationale, evidence, and current guidelines for antiplatelet treatment regimens following percutaneous coronary intervention.
Antiplatelet therapy is key to reducing local thrombotic complications and systemic ischaemic events among patients undergoing percutaneous coronary interventions (PCI), but it is inevitably associated with increased bleeding. The continuous refinement in stent technologies, together with the high incidence of ischaemic recurrences after PCI and the understanding of prognostic implications associated with bleeding, have led to a substantial evolution in antiplatelet treatment regimens over the past decades. Numerous investigations have been conducted to better stratify patients undergoing PCI according to their ischaemic and bleeding risks and to implement antithrombotic regimens accordingly. Evidence from these investigations have resulted in a number of antithrombotic treatment options as recommended by recent guidelines. In this State-of-the-Art review we provide the rationale, summarise the evidence, and discuss current and future directions of antiplatelet treatment regimens after PCI.
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Dominick Angiolillo Angiolillo
University of Florida
Mattía Galli
Interventional Cardiology
Jean‐Philippe Collet
Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1
EuroIntervention
Brigham and Women's Hospital
Sorbonne Université
University of Florida
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Angiolillo et al. (Thu,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6991e953da232a12acf1d995 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.4244/eij-d-21-00904