Higher efficacy of pre-hospital tirofiban with longer pretreatment time to primary PCI: Protection for the negative impact of time delay

Ton Heestermans, Menko Jan De Boer, Jochem W. Van Werkum, Arend Mosterd, A. T.Marcel Gosselink, Jan Henk E. Dambrink, Gert Van Houwelingen, Petra Koopmans, Christian Hamm, Felix Zijlstra, Jurriën M. Ten Berg, Arnoud W.J. Van 't Hof*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

10 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Aims: To evaluate the impact of longer duration of pre-hospital initiated antiplatelet and antithrombotic therapy on outcome in patients with ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI). Methods and results: In this sub-analysis of the Ongoing Tirofiban in Myocardial Evaluation (On-TIME) 2 trial, we studied, in 1,370 patients, the effect of pre-treatment time (time from administering study medication to time of angiography) on complete ST-segment resolution (STR), initial patency and 30-day mortality. Study medication consisted of high dose tirofiban (HDT) or control (placebo or no HDT) on top of high dose clopidogrel, aspirin and unfractionated heparin. Median pre-treatment time was 55 min (44-70). Longer pre-treatment was associated with longer transportation times, longer in-hospital delay, longer total ischaemic time (all p<0.001) and higher 30-day mortality (3.6% vs. 1.8%, p=0.046). Longer HDT pre-treatment time was independently associated with increased complete STR both before (odds ratio [OR] 1.51, 95%; confidence interval [CI] 0.98-2.32; p=0.06) and after PCI (OR 1.43, 95%; CI 1.02-2.02; p=0.039) and with a significantly improved initial TIMI 2 or 3 flow (51.4% vs. 43.4%, p=0.042) and reduced 30-day mortality (2.1% vs. 5.0%, p=0.047) as compared to longer control pre-treatment. Conclusions: Longer time delay before primary PCI is associated with increased mortality. Pre-treatment with high dose tirofiban, however, may compensate for this negative effect by improving ST-segment resolution and initial patency and by reducing mortality. Further studies should be performed to confirm that this is an attractive therapy for patients with longer delays to reperfusion.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)442-448
Number of pages7
JournalEuroIntervention
Volume7
Issue number4
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Aug 2011
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Duration of pre-treatment
  • Glycoprotein IIb/IIIa receptor inhibitors
  • Myocardial infarction
  • ST-segment deviation

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