Individualized antithrombotic therapy across atherosclerotic settings requires weighing ischemic benefit against bleeding risk, moving away from rigid one-size-fits-all approaches.
Patients with atherosclerotic vascular disease across various clinical settings including acute coronary syndromes (ACS), chronic coronary syndromes (CCS), ischemic stroke, peripheral artery disease (PAD), and atrial fibrillation (AF)
Individualized antithrombotic regimens including dual antiplatelet therapy (DAPT), dual pathway inhibition (low-dose rivaroxaban plus aspirin), monotherapy, and oral anticoagulation
This narrative review highlights the paradigm shift toward individualized, mechanism- and risk-oriented antithrombotic strategies across different atherosclerotic vascular beds.
Arterial thrombosis emerges from the interplay between plaque disruption, platelet activation, and coagulation pathway amplification on a background of heterogeneous ischemic and bleeding risk. Optimal antithrombotic therapy therefore varies across clinical settings, from acute coronary syndromes (ACS) to chronic coronary syndromes (CCS), ischemic stroke, peripheral artery disease (PAD), and atrial fibrillation (AF) associated with atherosclerotic disease. Contemporary European and North American guidelines endorse an increasingly individualized approach, moving away from rigid “one-size-fits-all” dual antiplatelet therapy (DAPT) duration and intensity and incorporating dual pathway inhibition with low-dose rivaroxaban plus aspirin in selected high-risk CCS and PAD patients. In ischemic stroke, short-course DAPT is confined to minor events and transient ischemic attacks, whereas long-term monotherapy remains standard, and the coexistence of AF typically shifts the balance toward oral anticoagulation. Across all scenarios, antithrombotic benefit must be weighed against bleeding, especially in elderly, frail, or comorbid patients. Evidence gaps remain substantial, particularly in patients with overlapping vascular territories, AF plus atherosclerotic disease, and after ischemic stroke of complex or mixed mechanisms. This narrative review summarizes current evidence and guideline-based strategies in major atherosclerotic settings, proposes a unifying conceptual framework, and highlights key uncertainties and research directions for truly personalized antithrombotic care.
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Pierre Sabouret
Domenico Mario Giamundo
Francesco Costa
Journal of Clinical Medicine
Sorbonne Université
Sapienza University of Rome
Università Cattolica del Sacro Cuore
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Sabouret et al. (Wed,) conducted a review in Atherosclerotic vascular disease (ACS, CCS, ischemic stroke, PAD, AF). Antithrombotic therapy was evaluated. Individualized antithrombotic therapy across atherosclerotic settings requires weighing ischemic benefit against bleeding risk, moving away from rigid one-size-fits-all approaches.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69be38ca6e48c4981c679671 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm15062325
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