
New study results from the American College of Cardiology Scientific Session (ACC.21) suggest that clopidogrel was superior to aspirin for long-term post-stenting maintenance.
Researchers for the prospective, randomized, open-label HOST-EXAM study included 5,436 patients in the study who had all received a coronary stent and who had gone without clinical events for 6 to 18 months following coronary intervention with a drug-eluting stent. Patients were assigned to either clopidogrel 75 mg daily monotherapy or to aspirin 100 mg daily, both for a duration of 24 months. The primary study endpoint was a composite of all-cause death, non-fatal myocardial infarction (MI), stroke, readmission due to acute coronary syndrome, and BARC bleeding type 3 or greater in the intent-to-treat population.
According to the results, the primary study endpoint occurred in 152 (5.7%) of patients in the clopidogrel group vs. 207 (7.7%) in the aspirin group (HR=0.73; 95% CI, 0.59 to 0.90). Blood clotting events, evaluated as secondary endpoints, occurred in 3.8% of the clopidogrel group vs. 5.6% of the aspirin group, and BARC bleeding was higher in the aspirin group as well. All differences in the secondary endpoint measures were statistically significant.