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Offset of ticagrelor prior to coronary artery bypass graft surgery for acute coronary syndromes: effects on platelet function and cellular adenosine uptake. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Ticagrelor, an antagonist of platelet ADP receptors, impacts platelet function and adenosine uptake, creating uncertainty about when to stop it before coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG).
  • Blood samples from ticagrelor-treated patients indicated that platelet function recovery is sufficient by 96 hours post-cessation, with significant improvement noted between 72 and 120 hours.
  • No differences were observed in adenosine uptake over the various timepoints, suggesting that the timing of ticagrelor discontinuation mainly influences platelet reactivity rather than adenosine levels.

Article Abstract

Ticagrelor is an antagonist of both platelet adenosine diphosphate (ADP) receptor P2Y and equilibrative nucleoside transporter-1. Optimal timing of ticagrelor cessation prior to coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG) remains unclear. We characterized the offset of ticagrelor's effects on platelets and cellular adenosine uptake in ticagrelor-treated patients (n = 13) awaiting CABG. Blood was drawn prior to CABG at multiple timepoints 2 to 120 (h) after the last dose of ticagrelor. Platelet function (n = 13) was assessed with multiple electrode aggregometry (MEA), expressed as arbitrary units (U) derived from area-under-the-curve (AUC) in response to ADP, and inhibition of adenosine uptake by high-performance liquid chromatography (n = 7). Mean±SD AUC was 20.3 ± 8.2 U (2 h post-ticagrelor), 33.0 ± 18.3U (24 h), 56.6 ± 30.6U (48 h), 61.4 ± 20.2U (72 h), 82.8 ± 24.2U (96 h) and 96.0 ± 15.3U (120 h). There was a significant difference between 72 h and 120 h ( = .007), but not between 96 h and 120 h ( > .99). By 96 h, all patients had AUC >31U, an accepted cutoff below which surgical bleeding risk is increased. Adenosine uptake showed no significant differences between the timepoints. These data suggest it takes 4 days for platelet reactivity to recover sufficiently after cessation of ticagrelor to avoid the excess risk of CABG-related bleeding. Discontinuing ticagrelor had no measurable effect on cellular adenosine uptake.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/09537104.2019.1709631DOI Listing

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