4.5 Article

Clopidogrel use and smoking cessation result in lower coated-platelet levels after stroke

Journal

PLATELETS
Volume 31, Issue 2, Pages 236-241

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC
DOI: 10.1080/09537104.2019.1609661

Keywords

Clopidogrel; Platelets; smoking; stroke

Funding

  1. United States Department of Veterans Affairs [1I01CX000340]
  2. American Heart Association [15GRNT25270010]

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Coated-platelets are a subset of highly procoagulant platelets elevated in patients with non-lacunar ischemic stroke and associated with stroke recurrence. Cross-sectional studies in controls have shown that smoking is associated with higher coated-platelet levels while chronic use of serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs), statins or aspirin is associated with lower coated-platelet levels. We now investigate if initiation of treatment with SSRIs, statins, clopidogrel, aspirin or oral anticoagulants and smoking cessation impacts coated-platelet levels at 90 days after ischemic stroke. Coated-platelet levels, reported as percent of cells converted to coated-platelets, were measured in 87 consecutive patients with stroke at baseline and repeated at 90 days. Repeated-measure ANOVA was used to determine if initiation of treatment with individual medications or smoking cessation impacted coated-platelet levels. Decreased coated-platelets levels at 90 days as compared to baseline were observed after initiation of treatment with clopidogrel (p = .0001, partial eta(2) = 0.17) and smoking cessation (p = .014, partial eta(2) = 0.10). Initiation of treatment with SSRIs, statins, aspirin or oral anticoagulants did not result in significant changes in coated-platelet potential. These novel longitudinal data suggest that clopidogrel therapy and smoking cessation attenuate coated-platelet potential at 90 days after ischemic stroke.

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