American Heart Journal
Volume 148, Issue 6 , Pages 990-997, December 2004

Cilostazol, clopidogrel or ticlopidine to prevent sub-acute stent thrombosis: A meta-analysis of randomized trials

  • Mark D. Schleinitz, MD, MS

      Affiliations

    • Division of General Internal Medicine, Brown University and Rhode Island Hospital, Providence, RI, USA
    • Corresponding Author InformationReprint requests: Mark D. Schleinitz, MD, MS, Rhode Island Hospital, Division of GIM, 593 Eddy St, MPB-1, Providence, RI 02903, USA.
  • ,
  • Ingram Olkin, PhD

      Affiliations

    • Department of Statistics, Stanford University, Stanford, Calif, USA
  • ,
  • Paul A. Heidenreich, MD, MS

      Affiliations

    • Division of Cardiology, Stanford University Medical Center and VA Palo Alto Healthcare System, Stanford and Palo Alto, Calif, USA

Abstract 

Background

Sub-acute thrombosis is a serious complication of coronary artery stenting. Clopidogrel plus aspirin is the accepted prophylactic regimen, but has yet to be proven superior to ticlopidine plus aspirin, and a new regimen combining cilostazol and aspirin has been introduced.

Methods

We conducted a meta-analysis of all trials that compared ≥2 oral anti-thrombotic strategies in patients undergoing coronary stent placement to determine which treatment optimally prevents adverse cardiac events in the 30 days following stent insertion. We used meta-regression to compare all strategies to a shared control strategy: ticlopidine plus aspirin. We also compared randomized trials to historically controlled and other non-randomized trials. We conducted sensitivity analysis and subgroup analysis to assess for possible heterogeneity.

Results

In comparison to ticlopidine plus aspirin the odds-ratios for cardiac events, with 95% confidence intervals were: aspirin alone, 4.29 (3.09–5.97), coumadin plus aspirin, 2.65 (2.18–3.21), clopidogrel plus aspirin, 1.06 (0.86–1.31), cilostazol plus aspirin, 0.73 (0.47–1.14). Among trials that compared clopidogrel plus aspirin to ticlopidine plus aspirin, historically controlled trials were statistically distinct from randomized trials. The analysis of cilostazol was sensitive to the small size of the included studies.

Conclusions

Neither clopidogrel plus aspirin nor cilostazol plus aspirin can be statistically distinguished from ticlopidine plus aspirin for the prevention of adverse cardiac events in the 30 days after stenting. A randomized trial including cilostazol is warranted.

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 Mark Schleinitz was supported in part by a training grant from the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, and BIRCWH grant HD43447-01.

PII: S0002-8703(04)00510-1

doi:10.1016/j.ahj.2004.03.066

American Heart Journal
Volume 148, Issue 6 , Pages 990-997, December 2004