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  • Marcantoni, Emanuela; Garshick, Michael S; Schwartz, Tamar; Ratnapala, Nicole; Cambria, Matthew; Dann, Rebecca; O'Brien, Meagan; Heguy, Adriana; Berger, Jeffrey S

    JACC. Basic to translational science, 11/2022, Letnik: 7, Številka: 11
    Journal Article

    Patients with HIV exhibit platelet activation and increased risk of cardiovascular disease, the prevention of which is not fully known. Fifty-five HIV-positive patients were randomized to clopidogrel, aspirin, or no-treatment for 14 days, and the platelet phenotype and ability to induce endothelial inflammation assessed. Clopidogrel as opposed to aspirin and no-treatment reduced platelet activation (P-selectin and PAC-1 expression). Compared with baseline, platelet-induced proinflammatory transcript expression of cultured endothelial cells were reduced in those assigned to clopidogrel, with no change in the aspirin and no-treatment arms. In HIV, clinical trials of clopidogrel to prevent cardiovascular disease are warranted. (Antiplatelet Therapy in HIV; NCT02559414).