The Value of Screening for HPR in Patients Undergoing Lower Extremity Arterial Endovascular Interventions

NCT ID: NCT04007055

Last Updated: 2025-03-11

Study Results

Results pending

The study team has not published outcome measurements, participant flow, or safety data for this trial yet. Check back later for updates.

Basic Information

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Recruitment Status

TERMINATED

Clinical Phase

PHASE3

Total Enrollment

31 participants

Study Classification

INTERVENTIONAL

Study Start Date

2019-08-09

Study Completion Date

2024-03-28

Brief Summary

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This is a randomized controlled trial designed to evaluate the role of screening for and intervening on patients with high on treatment platelet reactivity undergoing lower extremity arterial endovascular interventions.

Detailed Description

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Peripheral arterial disease (PAD) affects millions of people worldwide. Management of PAD has evolved from open surgery to an endovascular first approach leading to increased volume of endovascular interventions. Endovascular femoropopliteal intervention has emerged as a standard treatment for symptomatic PAD with acceptable patency rates.

Histologic observation of bare metal stents with early failure shows association with platelet rich thrombus, high counts of platelets, and neutrophils associated with stent struts. Additionally, high inflation pressures associated with balloon angioplasty often causes local tissue damage leading to platelet activation. These findings led to studies targeting platelet activation following endovascular treatment showing improved outcomes in patients receiving stronger platelet inhibition.

The current standard of care is prescription of dual antiplatelet therapy (DAPT) for femoropopliteal angioplasty or stenting. DAPT is active use of any two antiplatelet agents, often low dose aspirin plus P2Y12 inhibitor (clopidogrel, ticagrelor, prasugrel). There is improved stent patency and reduced adverse cardiovascular events in patients taking DAPT versus aspirin monotherapy.

Clopidogrel is the most common additional antiplatelet agent prescribed, but 4-65% of patients taking clopidogrel fail to achieve clinically expected platelet inhibition. This persistent platelet reactivity despite compliant antiplatelet use is commonly referred to as high on-treatment platelet reactivity (HPR), and increases risk of endovascular intervention failure and associated adverse clinical events in these patients. Clopidogrel is a pro-drug metabolized by CYP2C19 enzyme into its active form. Failure to respond appropriately to clopidogrel is largely due to genetic polymorphisms within CYP2C19 enzyme resulting in variable metabolization of clopidogrel into the active metabolite.

Alternative antiplatelet medications can overcome HPR through different metabolic pathways, but unfortunately at a significantly higher cost. Of these, ticagrelor is often used to overcome HPR for patients taking clopidogrel with favorable outcomes. However, regional cost for ticagrelor is $352.50 compared to $1.96 for clopidogrel. Cost and bleeding concerns among providers have prevented widespread use. Overall, there is paucity of evidence looking at HPR and lower extremity arterial endovascular interventions without consensus or guidelines on how to address this problem. Thus, the investigators propose an unblinded, randomized controlled trial in patients having femoropopliteal angioplasty or stenting comparing two strategies: 1. testing and treating for HPR versus 2. guideline based therapy without testing for HPR.

Conditions

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Peripheral Artery Disease Clopidogrel, Poor Metabolism of Peripheral Vascular Disease Artery Disease Peripheral Arterial Occlusive Disease

Study Design

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Allocation Method

RANDOMIZED

Intervention Model

PARALLEL

Randomized controlled trial
Primary Study Purpose

SCREENING

Blinding Strategy

NONE

Study Groups

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Experimental: screening/treating for HPR

Participants randomized to this arm will be screened and treated for HPR. Pharmacogenetics testing for CYP2C19 polymorphisms will be collected, stored, and analyzed at study completion.

Group Type EXPERIMENTAL

Point of care screening for HPR

Intervention Type DIAGNOSTIC_TEST

HPR testing using VerifyNow testing system. HPR is defined platelet reactivity units are greater than 234

Ticagrelor 90mg

Intervention Type DRUG

Participants who test positive for HPR will be prescribed ticagrelor 90mg twice daily instead of standard therapy with clopidogrel 75mg daily

Control: guideline based therapy

Participants randomized to this arm will receive usual care without screening for HPR. Pharmacogenetics testing for CYP2C19 polymorphisms will be collected, stored, and analyzed at study completion.

Group Type NO_INTERVENTION

No interventions assigned to this group

Interventions

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Point of care screening for HPR

HPR testing using VerifyNow testing system. HPR is defined platelet reactivity units are greater than 234

Intervention Type DIAGNOSTIC_TEST

Ticagrelor 90mg

Participants who test positive for HPR will be prescribed ticagrelor 90mg twice daily instead of standard therapy with clopidogrel 75mg daily

Intervention Type DRUG

Eligibility Criteria

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Inclusion Criteria

* Peripheral arterial disease
* Planned angioplasty or stenting of superficial femoral artery or popliteal artery.

Exclusion Criteria

* Patients treated on an emergency basis
* Planned intervention on prior site of open surgical intervention (autogenous or autologous bypass, endarterectomy, or patch angioplasty)
* Planned intervention at site exclusive of superficial femoral artery or popliteal artery
* Planned re-stenting at site of prior stent placement
* Planned re-angioplasty at site of prior angioplasty
* Known inability to tolerate antiplatelet regimen before enrollment
* Patients who plan on receiving follow up care outside the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center
* Current use of prasugrel or ticlopidine
* Current use of oral anticoagulation medication
* Pregnant patients
Minimum Eligible Age

18 Years

Maximum Eligible Age

90 Years

Eligible Sex

ALL

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

No

Sponsors

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Marissa Jarosinski

OTHER

Sponsor Role lead

Responsible Party

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Marissa Jarosinski

Resident in Vascular Surgery

Responsibility Role SPONSOR_INVESTIGATOR

Locations

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University of Pittsburgh Medical Center

Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, United States

Site Status

Countries

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United States

Other Identifiers

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STUDY19030453

Identifier Type: -

Identifier Source: org_study_id

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