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Similar observed CABG related bleeding complications in patients with and without clopidogrel loading doses. Arch Cardiol Mex 2010;80(3):176-80

Date

12/15/2010

Pubmed ID

21147584

Scopus ID

2-s2.0-77958579137 (requires institutional sign-in at Scopus site)   1 Citation

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Pretreatment with clopidogrel before percutaneous coronary intervention improves cardiovascular outcomes. However, some patients require elective coronary artery bypass graft (CABG) surgery instead, possibly increasing bleeding complications. We sought to assess the hemorrhagic complications and the length of hospital stay of stable patients receiving clopidogrel pretreatment that are referred for CABG.

METHODS: Between March and August 2007, 493 patients underwent diagnostic catheterization; 54 patients underwent elective CABG and were stratified according to clopidogrel loading dose (n = 20) or not (n = 34). Incidences of major hemorrhagic events and median post-surgical hospital stay were compared between groups.

RESULTS: TIMI Bleeding index was not significantly difference between the clopidogrel and not clopidogrel groups (mean difference 0.46; 95% CI -0.89 to 1.82; p = 0.5). The incidence of major TIMI bleeding (70% vs. 73.5%; p > 0.9), peak hemoglobin loss > 5 g/dL (60% vs. 38.2%; p = 0.2), and blood transfusion > 4 units (20% vs. 26.5%; p = 0.7) in clopidogrel vs. no-clopidogrel group were not statistically different. Interestingly, the post-surgical length of stay was longer for the no-clopidogrel group (median of 5 vs. 7 days; p = 0.006).

CONCLUSION: There was no significant evidence of increased bleeding or need for blood transfusion during CABG in patients pretreated with clopidogrel. The current practice of clopidogrel pretreatment before percutaneous coronary intervention does not significantly increase the risk of hemorrhagic complications in stable patients provided they can wait for at least 7 days before CABG. In a single center retrospective study, clopidogrel pretreatment was not found to be associated with increased bleeding or need for blood transfusion during coronary artery bypass graft surgery, suggesting that clopidogrel pretreatment before percutaneous coronary intervention does not significantly increase the risk of hemorrhagic complication in stable patients provided they can wait for 7 days before the surgery.

Author List

Rathi S, Lozano P, Boeckman LM, Exaire JE

Author

Pedro Lozano MD Associate Professor in the Medicine department at Medical College of Wisconsin




MESH terms used to index this publication - Major topics in bold

Coronary Artery Bypass
Female
Humans
Male
Middle Aged
Platelet Aggregation Inhibitors
Postoperative Hemorrhage
Retrospective Studies
Ticlopidine