The purpose of this pilot study is to establish the rate of cardiovascular events in patients with elevated troponins levels after major, non-cardiac surgery and to evaluate the efficacy and safety of FDA approved study drug (ticagrelor) compared to aspirin in these patients. Data from current studies suggest that myocardial injury detected by minor elevations in troponin levels within 3 days after non-cardiac surgery may occur in 10-24% of patients and is associated with an increased risk of mortality at 30 days and 1 year. There are no current guidelines for care of patients with elevated troponin levels in the absence of acute coronary syndrome. This study will assess if the increased risk of these patients is modifiable by an anti-platelet medication and evaluate the safety of this medication. Patients will be randomized in an open label fashion to receive ticagrelor (anti-platelet medication) or 81 mg. aspirin. Patients will be followed on study treatment for 12 months, with the last contact at one month post treatment discontinuation.
The objective of this pilot study is to establish the rate of cardiovascular events in patients with elevated troponins levels post major, non-cardiac surgery and to evaluate the efficacy and safety of ticagrelor treatment compared to aspirin in these patients. Data from current studies suggest that myocardial injury detected by minor elevations in troponin levels within 3 days after non-cardiac surgery may occur in 10-24% of patients and is associated with an increased risk of mortality at 30 days and 1 year. There are no current guidelines for care of patients with elevated troponin levels in the absence of acute coronary syndrome (ACS) and it is not certain if this is a modifiable disease process. Ticagrelor is a direct, reversible inhibitor of the platelet P2Y12ADP-receptor. It has been shown to be superior to clopidogrel in the setting of ACS. The clinical benefit of treating patients with port-operative troponin elevation with antiplatelet agents remains unexplored. The short half-life of ticagrelor makes it favorable to use in this setting. This is an open label, randomized, parallel group study comparing ticagrelor to aspirin in patients who experience troponin elevations post major non-cardiac surgery. Patients will be randomized in an open-label fashion to receive either ticagrelor 90 mg twice daily or aspirin 81 mg once daily. Patients will be followed for 13 months post randomization (12 months of treatment and a phone call 30 days after study drug discontinuation). The maximum duration of treatment will be 12 months. Follow-up visits will occur at Month 1, Month 6, and Month 12. Phone calls will be made at Month 3, Month 9, and at 30 days after study drug discontinuation. Up to 1000 patients with post-operative troponin elevation ≥2x ULN within first 7 postoperative days, will be enrolled in the study.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
PREVENTION
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
6
ticagrelor 90 mg bid
aspirin 81 mg daily
University of South Alabama Health System
Mobile, Alabama, United States
Arkansas Site Management Service, LLC
Little Rock, Arkansas, United States
University of Florida College of Medicine - Jacksonville
Jacksonville, Florida, United States
Florida Hospital Orthopaedic Institute and Fracture Care Center
Orlando, Florida, United States
University of South Florida
Tampa, Florida, United States
Central Georgia Heart Center
Macon, Georgia, United States
Saint Vincent Medical Group
Indianapolis, Indiana, United States
University of Kentucky
Lexington, Kentucky, United States
Sinai Hospital of Baltimore
Baltimore, Maryland, United States
McLaren Bay Region
Bay City, Michigan, United States
...and 14 more locations
Major Adverse Cardiovascular Events
Time to first occurence of the composite of Cardiovascular Death, Non-fatal Myocardial Infarction, Coronary Revascularization or Non-fatal Stroke. The number of patients with events is reported.
Time frame: up to 6 months. The planned duration of treatment was one year but the study was terminated after 6 months.
Cardiovascular Death
Time to first occurence of Cardiovascular death. The number of patients with events was reported.
Time frame: Up to 6 months. The planned duration of treatment was one year but the study was terminated after 6 months.
Non-fatal Myocardial Infarction or Coronary Revascularization
Time to first occurence of Non-fatal myocardial infarction or coronary revascularization. The number of participants with events was reported.
Time frame: up to 6 months. The planned duration of treatment was one year but the study was terminated after 6 months.
All-cause Death
Time to first occurence of All-cause death. The number of participants with events was reported.
Time frame: up to 6 months. The planned duration of treatment was one year but the study was terminated after 6 months.
Non-fatal Stroke
Time to first occurence of Non-fatal stroke. The number of participants with events was reported.
Time frame: up to 6 months. The planned duration of treatment was one year but the study was terminated after 6 months.
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