BackgroundDespite successful opening of culprit coronary artery, myocardial reperfusion
does not always follows primary percutaneous coronary intervention (PPCI).
Glycoprotein IIb/IIIa inhibitors are used in the treatment of no-reflow
(NR), but their role to prevent it is unproven.ObjectiveTo evaluate the effect of in-lab administration of tirofiban on the incidence
of NR in ST-elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI) treated with PPCI.MethodsSTEMI patients treated with PPCI were randomized (24 tirofiban and 34
placebo) in this double-blinded study to assess the impact of intravenous
tirofiban on the incidence of NR after PPCI according to angiographic and
electrocardiographic methods. End-points of the study were: TIMI-epicardial
flow grade; myocardial blush grade (MBG); resolution of ST-elevation <
70% (RST < 70%) at 90min and 24h after PPCI.ResultsBaseline anthropometric, clinical and angiographic characteristics were
balanced between the groups. The occurrence of TIMI flow < 3 was not
significantly different between the tirofiban (25%) and placebo (35.3%)
groups. MBG ≤ 2 did not occur in the tirofiban group, and was seen in
11.7% of patients in the placebo group (p=0.13). RST < 70% occurred in
41.6% x 55.8% (p=0.42) at 90min and in 29% x 55.9% (p=0.06) at 24h in
tirofiban and placebo groups, respectively. Severe NR (RST ≤ 30%) was
detected in 0% x 26.5% (p=0.01) at 90 min, and in 4.2% x 23.5% (p=0.06) at
24h in tirofiban and placebo groups, respectively.ConclusionThis pilot study showed a trend toward reduction of NR associated with in-lab
upfront use of tirofiban in STEMI patients treated with PPCI and paves the
way for a full-scale study testing this hypothesis.
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