Journal of the American Heart Association: Cardiovascular and Cerebrovascular Disease (Jan 2021)

Efficacy and Safety of Adjunctive Cilostazol to Clopidogrel‐Treated Diabetic Patients With Symptomatic Lower Extremity Artery Disease in the Prevention of Ischemic Vascular Events

  • Kallirroi Kalantzi,
  • Nikolaos Tentolouris,
  • Andreas J. Melidonis,
  • Styliani Papadaki,
  • Michail Peroulis,
  • Konstantinos A. Amantos,
  • George Andreopoulos,
  • George I. Bellos,
  • Dimitrios Boutel,
  • Magdalini Bristianou,
  • Dimitrios Chrisis,
  • Nikolaos A. Dimitsikoglou,
  • John Doupis,
  • Chrysoula Georgopoulou,
  • Stergios A. Gkintikas,
  • Styliani Iraklianou,
  • Κonstantinos Kanellas,
  • Kalliopi Kotsa,
  • Theocharis Koufakis,
  • Maria Kouroglou,
  • Anastasios G. Koutsovasilis,
  • Leonidas Lanaras,
  • Eirini Liouri,
  • Charalampos Lixouriotis,
  • Akrivi Lykoudi,
  • Efthymia Mandalaki,
  • Evanthia Papageorgiou,
  • Nikolaos Papanas,
  • Spyridon Rigas,
  • Maria I. Stamatelatou,
  • Ioannis Triantafyllidis,
  • Aikaterini Trikkalinou,
  • Aikaterini N. Tsouka,
  • Ourania Zacharopoulou,
  • Christos Zoupas,
  • Ioannis Tsolakis,
  • Alexandros D. Tselepis

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1161/JAHA.120.018184
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 1

Abstract

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Background Type 2 diabetes mellitus is a risk factor for lower extremity arterial disease. Cilostazol expresses antiplatelet, anti‐inflammatory, and vasodilator actions and improves the claudication intermittent symptoms. We investigated the efficacy and safety of adjunctive cilostazol to clopidogrel‐treated patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus exhibiting symptomatic lower extremity arterial disease, in the prevention of ischemic vascular events and improvement of the claudication intermittent symptoms. Methods and Results In a prospective 2‐arm, multicenter, open‐label, phase 4 trial, patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus with intermittent claudication receiving clopidogrel (75 mg/d) for at least 6 months, were randomly assigned in a 1:1 ratio, either to continue to clopidogrel monotherapy, without receiving placebo cilostazol (391 patients), or to additionally receive cilostazol, 100 mg twice/day (403 patients). The median duration of follow‐up was 27 months. The primary efficacy end point, the composite of acute ischemic stroke/transient ischemic attack, acute myocardial infarction, and death from vascular causes, was significantly reduced in patients receiving adjunctive cilostazol compared with the clopidogrel monotherapy group (sex‐adjusted hazard ratio [HR], 0.468; 95% CI, 0.252–0.870; P=0.016). Adjunctive cilostazol also significantly reduced the stroke/transient ischemic attack events (sex‐adjusted HR, 0.38; 95% CI, 0.15–0.98; P=0.046) and improved the ankle‐brachial index and pain‐free walking distance values (P=0.001 for both comparisons). No significant difference in the bleeding events, as defined by Bleeding Academic Research Consortium criteria, was found between the 2 groups (sex‐adjusted HR, 1.080; 95% CI, 0.579–2.015; P=0.809). Conclusions Adjunctive cilostazol to clopidogrel‐treated patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus with symptomatic lower extremity arterial disease may lower the risk of ischemic events and improve intermittent claudication symptoms, without increasing the bleeding risk, compared with clopidogrel monotherapy. Registration URL: https://www.clinicaltrials.gov; Unique identifier: NCT02983214.

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