Summary
The PlA polymorphism of the platelet glycoprotein IIIa gene is associated with altered platelet
function and response to antiplatelet drugs. We sought to assess whether the PlA polymorphism influences myocardial salvage achieved by reperfusion therapy in patients
with acute myocardial infarction. We analyzed 292 patients enrolled in 2 randomized
trials that compared stenting plus abciximab with thrombolysis (alteplase alone or
alteplase plus abciximab) in acute myocardial infarction. Patients were genotyped
for the PlA polymorphism using polymerase chain reaction with fluorogenic probes. Technetium-99m
sestamibi was injected before and 1-2 weeks after reperfusion treatment. The scintigrams
enabled the calculation of the initial perfusion defect, final infarct size, and the
proportion of initial defect salvaged by reperfusion (salvage index). Clinical follow-up
was done up to 18 months after primary treatment. The genotype distribution was as
follows: PlA2/A2 in 3.4%, PlA1/A2 in 24.7% and PlA1/A1 in 71.9% of patients. There were no significant differences between PlA2 allele carriers and PlA1/A1 patients in salvage index (0.46±0.50 vs. 0.41±0.43, respectively, P=0.48), final
infarct size (16.8±20.8% vs. 18.4±19.1% of left ventricle, respectively, P=0.46) as
well as 18-month mortality (8.5% vs.7.1%, respectively, P=0.69). The lack of relationship
between PlA2 allele and myocardial salvage was observed for both reperfusion strategies, stenting
and thrombolysis. Thus, these findings show that the functional PlA polymorphism of platelet glycoprotein IIIa has no influence on the degree of myocardial
salvage achieved by reperfusion therapies in patients with acute myocardial infarction.
Keywords
Pl
A polymorphism - glycoprotein IIIa - platelets - acute myocardial infarction - reperfusion