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Antiplatelet therapy and progression of coronary artery disease: a placebo-controlled trial with angiographic and clinical follow-up after myocardial infarction.

Dieker HJ, French JK, Joziasse IC, Brouwer MA, Elliott J, West TM, Webber BJ, Verheugt FW, White HD

Department of Cardiology, Radboud University Nijmegen Medical Centre, Nijmegen, The Netherlands.

INTRODUCTION: In patients after ST-elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI), antiplatelet therapy reduces subsequent cardiac events, which are often attributed to recurrent thrombosis with (sub)total occlusion in the infarct-related artery. Whether antiplatelet therapy influences the often subclinical process of coronary disease progression in noninfarct arteries has not been reported. METHODS: Quantitative coronary angiography of noninfarct arteries was performed on paired cine-angiograms of 149 patients from fibrinolytic trials who had a patent infarct-related artery 3 to 4 weeks following STEMI and who were randomized to either continue the daily combination of 50-mg aspirin and 400-mg dipyridamole or to matching placebo. Follow-up angiography was scheduled at 1 year. RESULTS: On a per-patient basis, the change in minimal luminal diameter (MLD) was 0.00 mm in the aspirin/dipyridamole group (n = 76) and was 0.01 mm in the placebo group (n = 73). There was no difference between these groups in the changes in MLD (-0.02 mm; 95% CI -0.09 to 0.05), neither were there significant differences in mean luminal diameter and diameter stenosis. Progression (1 segment/patient with > or = 0.40 mm decrease in MLD) was seen in two thirds of patients and did not independently predict long-term death and/or reinfarction. CONCLUSION: In this placebo-controlled trial after STEMI, the combination of aspirin and dipyridamole did not affect noninfarct artery disease progression. Progression did not predict long-term clinical outcome.

Published 18 December 2006 in Am Heart J, 153(1): 66.e1-8.
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