Article ID: CR-22-0032
Background: Previously published randomized atrial fibrillation (AF) percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) trials have demonstrated the safety and efficacy of a WOEST-like regimen (oral anticoagulant [OAC] plus P2Y12inhibitor) in patients with AF PCI within 1 year. However, the efficacy of this regimen in real-world practice has not been fully confirmed, especially the efficacy of the WOEST-like regimen using the approved dose of prasugrel in Japan.
Methods and Results: This post hoc analysis included 186 and 220 patients from the PENDULUM mono and PENDULUM registries, respectively. Endpoints were the cumulative incidences of clinically relevant bleeding (CRB) and major adverse cardiac and cerebrovascular events (MACCE) at 12 months after PCI. Differences in the enrollment period led to an increase in OAC prescriptions (from 64.7% to 81.2%) and a reduction in the median duration of triple antithrombotic therapy (from 203.0 to 32.0 days) in the PENDULUM vs. PENDULUM mono registries, respectively. After adjustment by the inverse probability of treatment method, in patients with OAC, PENDULUM mono AF significantly reduced CRB without increasing MACCE compared with PENDULUM AF.
Conclusions: A WOEST-like regimen with prasugrel may reduce CRB, without increasing MACCE, in Japanese patients with AF and high bleeding risk undergoing PCI.