TO THE EDITOR: We read with great interest the article by Munyon et al1 addressing recent developments in perioperative medicine. We would like to comment on the perioperative interruption of dual antiplatelet therapy, a common clinical problem.
Several registry analyses have shown that, with second-generation drug-eluting stents, interruption of 1 antiplatelet agent after the first month is safe.2,3 These registries included a substantial proportion of patients whose index stenting procedure was performed for acute coronary syndrome (up to 60%).2 On average, antiplatelet therapy interruption was brief (about 6 to 7 days).
Additional registry analyses have shown that surgery may be safely performed beyond the first month after drug-eluting stent placement.4,5 Specifically, a large Danish analysis of patients with a drug-eluting stent who underwent noncardiac surgery, matched to control patients without ischemic heart disease, showed that the risk of perioperative myocardial infarction and death was not increased beyond the first month after drug-eluting stent implantation. Specifically, the risk was not increased at the 1- to 2-month and 2- to 12-month postimplantation intervals. Acute coronary syndrome was the indication for stenting in 56% of the patients.
Therefore, while surgery is preferably delayed 6 months after drug-eluting stent implantation (class I recommendation in the European Society of Cardiology guidelines), surgery may be selectively performed 1 to 6 months after drug-eluting stent implantation with an acceptable risk. This is particularly so if the index stenting was performed in the setting of stable coronary arterial disease (class IIa recommendation if stenting was performed in the setting of stable coronary arterial disease without complex procedural features; class IIb recommendation if stenting was performed in the setting of acute coronary syndrome or complex procedural features).6 After drug-eluting stent implantation, the earliest cutpoint for considering surgery is 1 month rather than 3 months.
When surgery is performed within this 1- to 6-month interval, thienopyridine interruption should be kept brief and dual antiplatelet therapy reinitiated as soon as possible postoperatively. In fact, when thienopyridine therapy is interrupted 1 to 6 months after drug-eluting stent implantation, stent thrombosis typically occurs more than 6 or 7 days after interruption.7
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