elinogrel has been researched along with Acute-Lung-Injury* in 3 studies
1 review(s) available for elinogrel and Acute-Lung-Injury
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Dyspnea and reversibility of antiplatelet agents: ticagrelor, elinogrel, cangrelor, and beyond.
Oral reversible platelet P2Y12 receptor inhibitors (ticagrelor and elinogrel) cause double-digit rates of dyspnea, while irreversible oral antiplatelet drugs (aspirin, ticlopidoine, clopidogrel, and prasugrel) or intravenous glycoprotein IIb/IIIa inhibitors (abciximab, eptifibatide, or tirofiban) do not increase the incidence of dyspnea in randomized trials. Dyspnea after oral reversible antiplatelet agents remains unexplained. A transfusion-related acute lung injury (TRALI) hypothesis has been proposed. The dyspnea risks after cangrelor, an intravenous reversible antiplatelet agent, are not well defined but may offer a universal mechanism linking TRALI, dyspnea, and reversible platelet inhibition.. We analyzed safety data from recent head-to-head randomized trials with reversible antiplatelet agents (ticagrelor, elinogrel, and cangrelor) compared to irreversible (clopidogrel/placebo) comparators.. All three reversible antiplatelet agents cause excess dyspnea. In contrast to the high double-digit rates after oral ticagrelor or elinogrel, the dyspnea risks after intravenous cangrelor were smaller (<2%) but still consistently and significantly higher than in the corresponding control arms.. The clinical utility of reversible antiplatelet strategies has been challenged. Despite a potential advantage of fewer bleeding events during heart surgery, reversible antiplatelet agents carry the risk of potential autoimmune reactions manifesting as dyspnea. Repeated binding and unbinding cycles, impaired platelet turnover, and lung sequestration or apoptosis of overloaded destructive platelets are among the potential mechanism(s) responsible for dyspnea after reversible antiplatelet agents. Topics: Acute Lung Injury; Adenosine; Adenosine Monophosphate; Administration, Oral; Clopidogrel; Dyspnea; Humans; Platelet Aggregation Inhibitors; Purinergic P2Y Receptor Antagonists; Quinazolinones; Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic; Sulfonamides; Ticagrelor; Ticlopidine; Transfusion Reaction | 2014 |
2 other study(ies) available for elinogrel and Acute-Lung-Injury
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Viewpoint: reversible nature of platelet binding causing transfusion-related acute lung injury (TRALI) syndrome may explain dyspnea after ticagrelor and elinogrel.
There may be a universal mechanism explaining dyspnea after ticagrelor and elinogrel, namely, transfusion-related acute lung injury (TRALI). Indeed, recent clinical trials with ticagrelor (DISPERSE, DISPERSE-II, and PLATO), and elinogrel (INNOVATE PCI) revealed double-digit rates of dyspnea after novel reversible antiplatelet agents. In contrast, dyspnea is not associated with conventional non-reversible agents such as aspirin, or thienopyridines (ticlopidine, clopidogrel, or prasugrel) suggesting distinct mechanism of shortness of breath after ticagrelor and elinogrel. The adenosine hypothesis has been offered to explain such adverse association. However, despite obvious similarity between ticagrelor and adenosine molecules, the chemical structure of elinogrel is entirely different. In fact, ticagrelor is a cyclopentyl-triazolo-pyrimidine, while elinogrel is a quinazolinedione. Since both agents cause dyspnea, the adenosine hypothesis is no longer valid. In contrast, the reversible nature of platelet inhibition attributable to both ticagrelor and elinogrel causing premature cell ageing, apoptosis, impaired turnover due to sequestration of overloaded, exhausted platelets in the pulmonary circulation are among potential autoimmune mechanism(s) resulting in the development of a TRALI-like reaction, and frequent dyspnea. Despite expected benefit for better bleeding control, further development of reversible antithrombins is severely limited due to the existence of a potentially universal serious adverse event, such as TRALI-syndrome with dyspnea as a predominant clinical manifestation. Since TRALI is an established number one contributor to mortality after blood transfusions, ticagrelor death "benefit" in PLATO is challenged further. Topics: Acute Lung Injury; Adenosine; Blood Platelets; Dyspnea; Humans; Models, Biological; Platelet Aggregation Inhibitors; Quinazolinones; Sulfonamides; Syndrome; Ticagrelor; Transfusion Reaction | 2012 |
'Reversible nature of platelet binding causing transfusion-related acute lung injury (TRALI) syndrome may explain dyspnea after ticagrelor and elinogrel' - a hypothesis that remains unproven.
Topics: Acute Lung Injury; Adenosine; Humans; Platelet Aggregation Inhibitors; Quinazolinones; Sulfonamides; Ticagrelor; Transfusion Reaction | 2012 |