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– Older patients with non-ST-elevation acute coronary syndrome who were assigned to 12 months of dual antiplatelet therapy with clopidogrel experienced significantly less major and minor bleeding than with ticagrelor or prasugrel and were similarly protected from thrombotic events in the prospective randomized POPular AGE trial, Marieke E. Gimbel, MD, reported at the annual congress of the European Society of Cardiology.

Dr. Marieke E. Gimbel

“Therefore, we consider clopidogrel the preferred treatment in patients age 70 or older with non-ST-elevation ACS,” said Dr. Gimbel, a cardiologist at St. Antonius Hospital in Nieuwegein, The Netherlands.

This stance is contrary to both the current ESC and U.S. guidelines on management of non-ST-elevation ACS, which preferentially recommend ticagrelor and prasugrel over clopidogrel, chiefly on the basis of the large PLATO (N Engl J Med 2009;361:1045-57) and TRITON TIMI 38 (N Engl J Med 2007;357:2001-15) randomized trials. Those studies from the previous decade reported significantly lower rates of the composite endpoint of cardiovascular death, acute MI, or stroke in patients on ticagrelor or prasugrel, respectively, than with clopidogrel. But this benefit came at a cost of significantly higher rates of TIMI major bleeding than with clopidogrel, and multiple studies have shown that major bleeding in ACS patients is associated with a sharply increased risk of death.

Bleeding is an issue of particular concern in the elderly. But older patients were greatly underrepresented in PLATO and TRITON, where they comprised just 13%-15% of participants, even though registry studies would suggest older individuals make up about 35% of all patients with non-ST-elevation ACS. Selective inclusion of elderly patients in the major trials means those study results can’t legitimately be extrapolated to the entire elderly patient population.

“The best course of action in the elderly has been unclear,” Dr. Gimbel argued.

 

 



The POPular AGE (POP AGE) trial was an open-label study featuring independent blinded adjudication of clinical events. The median age of participants was 77 years, and about one-quarter had a prior MI. It was basically an all-comers study in which 1,003 non-ST-elevation ACS patients age 70 or older at 11 Dutch medical centers were randomized within 3 days of hospital admission to 12 months of dual antiplatelet therapy with either ticagrelor or one of the two more potent antiplatelet agents. Although the choice of ticagrelor or prasugrel was left to the physician, it’s noteworthy that 94% of patients in the high-potency P2Y12 inhibitor study arm were discharged on ticagrelor. At 12 months, the adherence rate to the assigned regimen was 76% in the clopidogrel group and just 51% in what was essentially the ticagrelor arm. Bleeding was the number-one reason for the much higher discontinuation rate in the ticagrelor group, followed by initiation of oral anticoagulation and dyspnea.

The primary safety endpoint in POP AGE was the rate of major and minor bleeding as defined in the PLATO study. The rate was 17.6% with clopidogrel, compared with 23.1% in the ticagrelor group, for a highly significant 26% reduction in relative risk. Of note, the PLATO major bleeding rate was 4.4% with clopidogrel, versus 8% with ticagrelor/prasugrel.

The coprimary endpoint was net clinical benefit, defined as a composite of all-cause mortality, MI, stroke, and PLATO major and minor bleeding. The rate was 30.7% with ticagrelor and 27.3% in the clopidogrel group, for an absolute 3.4% risk difference favoring clopidogrel, which barely missed the prespecified cutoff for noninferiority. Indeed, even though the 12-month follow-up was 99.6% complete, Dr. Gimbel raised the possibility that when the results come in for the final 0.4% of the study population, the difference in net clinical benefit may reach significance.

In any case, she noted there was no between-group difference in the key secondary endpoint of death, MI, or stroke, with rates of 12.8% and 12.5% in the clopidogrel and ticagrelor groups, respectively.

“One might expect a higher ischemic event rate with clopidogrel compared to ticagrelor. However, in these elderly patients there was no difference between the two treatment strategies,” the cardiologist observed.

POP AGE is hailed as ‘a wake up call’

In an interview, Freek Verheugt, MD, PhD, professor emeritus of cardiology at Radboud University in Nijmegen, The Netherlands, called POP AGE “a very important study.”

“The problem with most studies in the elderly is that they are post hoc analyses from huge trials like PLATO and TRITON, and also the thrombolysis and primary PCI studies. The elderly do very well in those studies, because only the very fit elderly are included in the megatrials. It’s much more important to do a prospective randomized trial in the elderly only, and this is one of the very few done so far,” he observed.

Bleeding is a major problem in the elderly with ACS. It leads to more MIs, strokes, and increased mortality.

“Even minor bleeding is an issue,” Dr. Verheugt added. “Minor bleeding is a major problem, because patients who encounter minor bleeding – nose bleeds, gum bleeds, or even in their underwear – they do away with all drugs. They stop their antithrombotic, but they also stop their statin, their ACE inhibitor – their lifesavers – and that’s why they die.”

So is POP AGE a practice-changing study?

“No, of course not,” the cardiologist scoffed. “To be practice-changing you need several trials going in the same direction. But I think if there are more data prospectively accrued in the elderly alone, showing the same, then POP AGE would be practice-changing.”

“In my personal view, this study is a wake-up call. If you have an elderly, frail patient presenting with ACS, strongly consider good, old clopidogrel. Although people say that 30% of patients on clopidogrel don’t have appropriate platelet inhibition, that’s a laboratory finding. It’s not a clinical finding. POP AGE gave us a clinical finding showing that they do quite well,” he said.

Dr. Verheugt was on the independent data safety monitoring board for POP AGE, funded by ZonMw, a Dutch governmental research organization. Neither Dr. Verheugt nor Dr. Gimbel reported having any financial conflicts of interest.
 

SOURCE: Gimbel ME. ESC 2019, Abstract 84.


 



 

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– Older patients with non-ST-elevation acute coronary syndrome who were assigned to 12 months of dual antiplatelet therapy with clopidogrel experienced significantly less major and minor bleeding than with ticagrelor or prasugrel and were similarly protected from thrombotic events in the prospective randomized POPular AGE trial, Marieke E. Gimbel, MD, reported at the annual congress of the European Society of Cardiology.

Dr. Marieke E. Gimbel

“Therefore, we consider clopidogrel the preferred treatment in patients age 70 or older with non-ST-elevation ACS,” said Dr. Gimbel, a cardiologist at St. Antonius Hospital in Nieuwegein, The Netherlands.

This stance is contrary to both the current ESC and U.S. guidelines on management of non-ST-elevation ACS, which preferentially recommend ticagrelor and prasugrel over clopidogrel, chiefly on the basis of the large PLATO (N Engl J Med 2009;361:1045-57) and TRITON TIMI 38 (N Engl J Med 2007;357:2001-15) randomized trials. Those studies from the previous decade reported significantly lower rates of the composite endpoint of cardiovascular death, acute MI, or stroke in patients on ticagrelor or prasugrel, respectively, than with clopidogrel. But this benefit came at a cost of significantly higher rates of TIMI major bleeding than with clopidogrel, and multiple studies have shown that major bleeding in ACS patients is associated with a sharply increased risk of death.

Bleeding is an issue of particular concern in the elderly. But older patients were greatly underrepresented in PLATO and TRITON, where they comprised just 13%-15% of participants, even though registry studies would suggest older individuals make up about 35% of all patients with non-ST-elevation ACS. Selective inclusion of elderly patients in the major trials means those study results can’t legitimately be extrapolated to the entire elderly patient population.

“The best course of action in the elderly has been unclear,” Dr. Gimbel argued.

 

 



The POPular AGE (POP AGE) trial was an open-label study featuring independent blinded adjudication of clinical events. The median age of participants was 77 years, and about one-quarter had a prior MI. It was basically an all-comers study in which 1,003 non-ST-elevation ACS patients age 70 or older at 11 Dutch medical centers were randomized within 3 days of hospital admission to 12 months of dual antiplatelet therapy with either ticagrelor or one of the two more potent antiplatelet agents. Although the choice of ticagrelor or prasugrel was left to the physician, it’s noteworthy that 94% of patients in the high-potency P2Y12 inhibitor study arm were discharged on ticagrelor. At 12 months, the adherence rate to the assigned regimen was 76% in the clopidogrel group and just 51% in what was essentially the ticagrelor arm. Bleeding was the number-one reason for the much higher discontinuation rate in the ticagrelor group, followed by initiation of oral anticoagulation and dyspnea.

The primary safety endpoint in POP AGE was the rate of major and minor bleeding as defined in the PLATO study. The rate was 17.6% with clopidogrel, compared with 23.1% in the ticagrelor group, for a highly significant 26% reduction in relative risk. Of note, the PLATO major bleeding rate was 4.4% with clopidogrel, versus 8% with ticagrelor/prasugrel.

The coprimary endpoint was net clinical benefit, defined as a composite of all-cause mortality, MI, stroke, and PLATO major and minor bleeding. The rate was 30.7% with ticagrelor and 27.3% in the clopidogrel group, for an absolute 3.4% risk difference favoring clopidogrel, which barely missed the prespecified cutoff for noninferiority. Indeed, even though the 12-month follow-up was 99.6% complete, Dr. Gimbel raised the possibility that when the results come in for the final 0.4% of the study population, the difference in net clinical benefit may reach significance.

In any case, she noted there was no between-group difference in the key secondary endpoint of death, MI, or stroke, with rates of 12.8% and 12.5% in the clopidogrel and ticagrelor groups, respectively.

“One might expect a higher ischemic event rate with clopidogrel compared to ticagrelor. However, in these elderly patients there was no difference between the two treatment strategies,” the cardiologist observed.

POP AGE is hailed as ‘a wake up call’

In an interview, Freek Verheugt, MD, PhD, professor emeritus of cardiology at Radboud University in Nijmegen, The Netherlands, called POP AGE “a very important study.”

“The problem with most studies in the elderly is that they are post hoc analyses from huge trials like PLATO and TRITON, and also the thrombolysis and primary PCI studies. The elderly do very well in those studies, because only the very fit elderly are included in the megatrials. It’s much more important to do a prospective randomized trial in the elderly only, and this is one of the very few done so far,” he observed.

Bleeding is a major problem in the elderly with ACS. It leads to more MIs, strokes, and increased mortality.

“Even minor bleeding is an issue,” Dr. Verheugt added. “Minor bleeding is a major problem, because patients who encounter minor bleeding – nose bleeds, gum bleeds, or even in their underwear – they do away with all drugs. They stop their antithrombotic, but they also stop their statin, their ACE inhibitor – their lifesavers – and that’s why they die.”

So is POP AGE a practice-changing study?

“No, of course not,” the cardiologist scoffed. “To be practice-changing you need several trials going in the same direction. But I think if there are more data prospectively accrued in the elderly alone, showing the same, then POP AGE would be practice-changing.”

“In my personal view, this study is a wake-up call. If you have an elderly, frail patient presenting with ACS, strongly consider good, old clopidogrel. Although people say that 30% of patients on clopidogrel don’t have appropriate platelet inhibition, that’s a laboratory finding. It’s not a clinical finding. POP AGE gave us a clinical finding showing that they do quite well,” he said.

Dr. Verheugt was on the independent data safety monitoring board for POP AGE, funded by ZonMw, a Dutch governmental research organization. Neither Dr. Verheugt nor Dr. Gimbel reported having any financial conflicts of interest.
 

SOURCE: Gimbel ME. ESC 2019, Abstract 84.


 



 

 

– Older patients with non-ST-elevation acute coronary syndrome who were assigned to 12 months of dual antiplatelet therapy with clopidogrel experienced significantly less major and minor bleeding than with ticagrelor or prasugrel and were similarly protected from thrombotic events in the prospective randomized POPular AGE trial, Marieke E. Gimbel, MD, reported at the annual congress of the European Society of Cardiology.

Dr. Marieke E. Gimbel

“Therefore, we consider clopidogrel the preferred treatment in patients age 70 or older with non-ST-elevation ACS,” said Dr. Gimbel, a cardiologist at St. Antonius Hospital in Nieuwegein, The Netherlands.

This stance is contrary to both the current ESC and U.S. guidelines on management of non-ST-elevation ACS, which preferentially recommend ticagrelor and prasugrel over clopidogrel, chiefly on the basis of the large PLATO (N Engl J Med 2009;361:1045-57) and TRITON TIMI 38 (N Engl J Med 2007;357:2001-15) randomized trials. Those studies from the previous decade reported significantly lower rates of the composite endpoint of cardiovascular death, acute MI, or stroke in patients on ticagrelor or prasugrel, respectively, than with clopidogrel. But this benefit came at a cost of significantly higher rates of TIMI major bleeding than with clopidogrel, and multiple studies have shown that major bleeding in ACS patients is associated with a sharply increased risk of death.

Bleeding is an issue of particular concern in the elderly. But older patients were greatly underrepresented in PLATO and TRITON, where they comprised just 13%-15% of participants, even though registry studies would suggest older individuals make up about 35% of all patients with non-ST-elevation ACS. Selective inclusion of elderly patients in the major trials means those study results can’t legitimately be extrapolated to the entire elderly patient population.

“The best course of action in the elderly has been unclear,” Dr. Gimbel argued.

 

 



The POPular AGE (POP AGE) trial was an open-label study featuring independent blinded adjudication of clinical events. The median age of participants was 77 years, and about one-quarter had a prior MI. It was basically an all-comers study in which 1,003 non-ST-elevation ACS patients age 70 or older at 11 Dutch medical centers were randomized within 3 days of hospital admission to 12 months of dual antiplatelet therapy with either ticagrelor or one of the two more potent antiplatelet agents. Although the choice of ticagrelor or prasugrel was left to the physician, it’s noteworthy that 94% of patients in the high-potency P2Y12 inhibitor study arm were discharged on ticagrelor. At 12 months, the adherence rate to the assigned regimen was 76% in the clopidogrel group and just 51% in what was essentially the ticagrelor arm. Bleeding was the number-one reason for the much higher discontinuation rate in the ticagrelor group, followed by initiation of oral anticoagulation and dyspnea.

The primary safety endpoint in POP AGE was the rate of major and minor bleeding as defined in the PLATO study. The rate was 17.6% with clopidogrel, compared with 23.1% in the ticagrelor group, for a highly significant 26% reduction in relative risk. Of note, the PLATO major bleeding rate was 4.4% with clopidogrel, versus 8% with ticagrelor/prasugrel.

The coprimary endpoint was net clinical benefit, defined as a composite of all-cause mortality, MI, stroke, and PLATO major and minor bleeding. The rate was 30.7% with ticagrelor and 27.3% in the clopidogrel group, for an absolute 3.4% risk difference favoring clopidogrel, which barely missed the prespecified cutoff for noninferiority. Indeed, even though the 12-month follow-up was 99.6% complete, Dr. Gimbel raised the possibility that when the results come in for the final 0.4% of the study population, the difference in net clinical benefit may reach significance.

In any case, she noted there was no between-group difference in the key secondary endpoint of death, MI, or stroke, with rates of 12.8% and 12.5% in the clopidogrel and ticagrelor groups, respectively.

“One might expect a higher ischemic event rate with clopidogrel compared to ticagrelor. However, in these elderly patients there was no difference between the two treatment strategies,” the cardiologist observed.

POP AGE is hailed as ‘a wake up call’

In an interview, Freek Verheugt, MD, PhD, professor emeritus of cardiology at Radboud University in Nijmegen, The Netherlands, called POP AGE “a very important study.”

“The problem with most studies in the elderly is that they are post hoc analyses from huge trials like PLATO and TRITON, and also the thrombolysis and primary PCI studies. The elderly do very well in those studies, because only the very fit elderly are included in the megatrials. It’s much more important to do a prospective randomized trial in the elderly only, and this is one of the very few done so far,” he observed.

Bleeding is a major problem in the elderly with ACS. It leads to more MIs, strokes, and increased mortality.

“Even minor bleeding is an issue,” Dr. Verheugt added. “Minor bleeding is a major problem, because patients who encounter minor bleeding – nose bleeds, gum bleeds, or even in their underwear – they do away with all drugs. They stop their antithrombotic, but they also stop their statin, their ACE inhibitor – their lifesavers – and that’s why they die.”

So is POP AGE a practice-changing study?

“No, of course not,” the cardiologist scoffed. “To be practice-changing you need several trials going in the same direction. But I think if there are more data prospectively accrued in the elderly alone, showing the same, then POP AGE would be practice-changing.”

“In my personal view, this study is a wake-up call. If you have an elderly, frail patient presenting with ACS, strongly consider good, old clopidogrel. Although people say that 30% of patients on clopidogrel don’t have appropriate platelet inhibition, that’s a laboratory finding. It’s not a clinical finding. POP AGE gave us a clinical finding showing that they do quite well,” he said.

Dr. Verheugt was on the independent data safety monitoring board for POP AGE, funded by ZonMw, a Dutch governmental research organization. Neither Dr. Verheugt nor Dr. Gimbel reported having any financial conflicts of interest.
 

SOURCE: Gimbel ME. ESC 2019, Abstract 84.


 



 

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Key clinical point: The POP AGE trial implies clopidoprel is the P2Y12 inhibitor of choice in elderly patients with non-ST-elevation ACS.

Major finding: The rate of major and minor bleeding was 17.6% with clopidogrel, compared with 23.1% in the ticagrelor group, for a highly significant 26% reduction in relative risk.

Study details: POPular AGE, an 11-center Dutch RCT, included 1,003 patients age 70 or older with non-ST-elevation ACS.

Disclosures: The presenter reported having no financial conflicts regarding the study, funded by the Dutch government.

Source: Gimbel ME. ESC 2019, Abstract 84.

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