Impact of ticagrelor with or without aspirin on total and recurrent bleeding and ischaemic events after percutaneous coronary intervention: a sub-study of the TWILIGHT trial
European Heart Journal - Cardiovascular Pharmacotherapy

Abstract
In standard time-to-first event analysis, early aspirin discontinuation followed by ticagrelor monotherapy has been shown to reduce bleeding without increasing ischaemic complications compared with ticagrelor plus aspirin after percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI). We evaluated whether these treatment effects are preserved when recurrent events are considered.
In this TWILIGHT trial post-hoc analysis, we assessed the effects of ticagrelor monotherapy on the total number of events that occurred over the 12-month follow-up among 7119 high-risk patients randomized to aspirin or placebo in addition to ticagrelor at 3 months post-PCI if event-free and adherent to treatment. There were 391 patients with at least one Bleeding Academic Research Consortium (BARC) type 2, 3, or 5 bleeding (primary endpoint). Of those, 28 (7.2%) had a recurrent event. The total number of BARC 2, 3, or 5 bleeding events was 148 in the ticagrelor monotherapy arm compared with 278 with ticagrelor plus aspirin arm (
Among selected high-risk patients who underwent PCI and completed 3 months of dual antiplatelet therapy followed by ticagrelor with or without aspirin, recurrent bleeding was less common than recurrent ischaemic events over 12 months. Analysis of total events indicates that ticagrelor monotherapy continues to be more effective than ticagrelor plus aspirin in reducing bleeding without a signal of ischaemic harm.
Contributors

Usman Baber
Author

Timothy Collier
Author

Samantha Sartori
Author

George Dangas
Author

Dominick J Angiolillo
Author

Vijay Kunadian
Author

Carlo Briguori
Author

Dariusz Dudek
Author

C Michael Gibson
Author

Kurt Huber
Author

Upendra Kaul
Author

Ran Kornowski
Author

Mitchell W Krucoff
Author

Shamir Mehta
Author

David J Moliterno
Author

E Magnus Ohman
Author

Gennaro Sardella
Author

Samin K Sharma
Author

Richard Shlofmitz
Author

Giora Weisz
Author

Bernhard Witzenbichler
Author

P Gabriel Steg
Author

Stuart Pocock
Author

Roxana Mehran
Author
Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai New York City , United States of America
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