Smoking and outcomes following guided de-escalation of antiplatelet treatment in acute coronary syndrome patients: a substudy from the randomized TROPICAL-ACS trial
European Heart Journal - Cardiovascular Pharmacotherapy

Abstract
Prior analyses disclosed variations in antiplatelet drug response and clinical outcomes between smokers and non-smokers, thus the safety and efficacy of any dual antiplatelet therapy (DAPT) de-escalation strategy may differ in relation to smoking status. Hence, we assessed the impact of smoking on clinical outcomes and adenosine diphosphate-induced platelet aggregation following guided de-escalation of DAPT in invasively managed acute coronary syndrome (ACS) patients.
The multicentre TROPICAL-ACS trial randomized 2610 biomarker-positive ACS patients 1:1 to standard treatment with prasugrel for 12 months (control group) or a platelet function testing guided de-escalation of DAPT. Current smokers (
Guided DAPT de-escalation appears to be equally safe and effective in smokers and non-smokers. Regardless of smoking status and especially for those patients deemed unsuitable for 1 year of potent platelet inhibition this DAPT strategy might be used as an alternative antiplatelet treatment regimen.
Contributors

Dietmar Trenk
Author

Tobias Geisler
Author

Johannes Rieber
Author

Martin Hadamitzky
Author

Lisa Gross
Author

Mathias Orban
Author

Danny Kupka
Author

Monika Baylacher
Author

Susan Müller
Author

Kurt Huber
Author

Lukasz Koltowski
Author

Zenon Huczek
Author

Jens Heyn
Author

Claudius Jacobshagen
Author

Dániel Aradi
Author

Steffen Massberg
Author

Dirk Sibbing
Author

Ralph Hein
Author

