Pre-hospital administration of tirofiban in diabetic patients with ST-elevation myocardial infarction undergoing primary angioplasty: a sub-analysis of the On-Time 2 trial.

Abstract

Item does not contain fulltextAIMS: Glycoprotein IIb/IIIa blocking agents seem to improve percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) results in patients with ST-elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI). We aimed to compare the effect of pre-hospital administration of tirofiban in STEMI patients with and without diabetes mellitus (DM) treated with primary PCI. METHODS AND RESULTS: We performed a pre-specified sub-analysis of the randomised On-Time II trial (n=984) and it's open label run-in phase (n=414), which investigated pre-hospital administration of high dose tirofiban in STEMI patients treated with primary PCI. Two-hundred and twenty (16%) diabetic patients (known DM or Hba1C >/=6.2%) were included, 101 in the placebo group and 119 in the tirofiban group. In patients with DM, randomisation to tirofiban resulted in a lower residual ST deviation (5.1+/-8.5 mm vs. 6.2+/-5.6 mm, p=0.003), a reduced infarct size (CK 1694+/-1925 U/L vs. CK 2040+/-1829 U/L, p=0.02) and a trend towards lower one-year mortality (4.6% vs. 11.6%, p=0.07). The beneficial effects of tirofiban were more pronounced in diabetic patients compared to patients without diabetes. CONCLUSIONS: Pre-hospital administration of tirofiban in diabetic STEMI patients treated with primary PCI improves ST resolution and reduces myocardial infarct size. Tirofiban seems particularly beneficial in patients with diabetes.1 augustus 201

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