BACKGROUND Peripheral artery disease(PAD)affects millions globally,with a 5.6%prevalence in 2015 impacting 236 million adults,rising above 10%in those over 60 due to factors like diabetes and smoking.Post-revasculariz...BACKGROUND Peripheral artery disease(PAD)affects millions globally,with a 5.6%prevalence in 2015 impacting 236 million adults,rising above 10%in those over 60 due to factors like diabetes and smoking.Post-revascularization,single antiplatelet therapy(SAPT)is standard,but dual antiplatelet therapy(DAPT)may improve outcomes,though duration and bleeding risks are unclear.The 2024 American College of Cardiology/American Heart Association guidelines endorse short-term DAPT,yet evidence gaps remain in comparative efficacy and safety.We hypothesized that DAPT reduces cardiovascular events and reinterventions vs SAPT without significantly elevating bleeding in PAD patients’post-lower extremity revascularization.AIM To evaluate the efficacy and safety of DAPT vs SAPT in PAD patients’post-revascularization.METHODS This systematic review and meta-analysis followed Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses guidelines,searching PubMed,EMBASE,and ScienceDirect up to July 2025.Included were randomized controlled trials(RCTs)and cohort studies from various global settings(e.g.,hospitals,tertiary care)comparing DAPT(aspirin plus P2Y12 inhibitor for>1 month)to SAPT in symptomatic PAD patients undergoing endovascular or surgical revascularization(n up to 28244 participants selected via eligibility criteria).Data were pooled using random-effects models for risk ratio(RR)with 95%CI;heterogeneity was assessed via the I²statistic.Quality appraisal used Risk of Bias in Non-randomized Studies of Interventions for cohorts and Risk of Bias 2.0 for RCTs;certainty was evaluated via Grading of Recommendations Assessment,Development and Evaluation(GRADE).RESULTS Twelve studies(3 RCTs,9 cohorts,conducted 2010–2025 with follow-ups of 6 months to 5 years)were included.DAPT showed no significant difference but a trend toward reduced all-cause mortality(RR:0.52,95%CI:0.27–1.01,P=0.05,DAPT of 298/9545 events vs SAPT of 165/566 events)or stroke(RR:0.72,95%CI:0.30–1.72,P=0.46,DAPT of 16/3729 events vs SAPT of 41/7673 events)vs SAPT.DAPT significantly reduced cardiac mortality(RR:0.46,95%CI:0.27–0.80,P=0.006,DAPT of 78/2903 events vs SAPT of 171/1465 events,risk difference:-5.4%),myocardial infarction(RR:0.82,95%CI:0.71–0.94,P=0.004,DAPT of 233/7704 events vs SAPT of 262/9130 events,risk difference:-1.8%),and major reintervention(RR:0.58,95%CI:0.35–0.98,P=0.04,DAPT of 803/205 events vs SAPT of 1197/4 events,risk difference:-42%).Bleeding showed no difference(RR:1.12,95%CI:0.42–3.03,P=0.82,DAPT of 195/2775 events vs SAPT of 202/8234 events).Heterogeneity was high(I^(2)=59%–97%).Quality revealed moderate to serious bias in cohorts and some concerns in RCTs;GRADE certainty moderate for cardiac mortality,myocardial infarction,reintervention,low for others due to inconsistency and imprecision.CONCLUSION DAPT reduces cardiac mortality,myocardial infarction,and major reintervention risks compared to SAPT in PAD post-revascularization without apparent bleeding increase,though limited by heterogeneity and low certainty for some outcomes.展开更多
文摘BACKGROUND Peripheral artery disease(PAD)affects millions globally,with a 5.6%prevalence in 2015 impacting 236 million adults,rising above 10%in those over 60 due to factors like diabetes and smoking.Post-revascularization,single antiplatelet therapy(SAPT)is standard,but dual antiplatelet therapy(DAPT)may improve outcomes,though duration and bleeding risks are unclear.The 2024 American College of Cardiology/American Heart Association guidelines endorse short-term DAPT,yet evidence gaps remain in comparative efficacy and safety.We hypothesized that DAPT reduces cardiovascular events and reinterventions vs SAPT without significantly elevating bleeding in PAD patients’post-lower extremity revascularization.AIM To evaluate the efficacy and safety of DAPT vs SAPT in PAD patients’post-revascularization.METHODS This systematic review and meta-analysis followed Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses guidelines,searching PubMed,EMBASE,and ScienceDirect up to July 2025.Included were randomized controlled trials(RCTs)and cohort studies from various global settings(e.g.,hospitals,tertiary care)comparing DAPT(aspirin plus P2Y12 inhibitor for>1 month)to SAPT in symptomatic PAD patients undergoing endovascular or surgical revascularization(n up to 28244 participants selected via eligibility criteria).Data were pooled using random-effects models for risk ratio(RR)with 95%CI;heterogeneity was assessed via the I²statistic.Quality appraisal used Risk of Bias in Non-randomized Studies of Interventions for cohorts and Risk of Bias 2.0 for RCTs;certainty was evaluated via Grading of Recommendations Assessment,Development and Evaluation(GRADE).RESULTS Twelve studies(3 RCTs,9 cohorts,conducted 2010–2025 with follow-ups of 6 months to 5 years)were included.DAPT showed no significant difference but a trend toward reduced all-cause mortality(RR:0.52,95%CI:0.27–1.01,P=0.05,DAPT of 298/9545 events vs SAPT of 165/566 events)or stroke(RR:0.72,95%CI:0.30–1.72,P=0.46,DAPT of 16/3729 events vs SAPT of 41/7673 events)vs SAPT.DAPT significantly reduced cardiac mortality(RR:0.46,95%CI:0.27–0.80,P=0.006,DAPT of 78/2903 events vs SAPT of 171/1465 events,risk difference:-5.4%),myocardial infarction(RR:0.82,95%CI:0.71–0.94,P=0.004,DAPT of 233/7704 events vs SAPT of 262/9130 events,risk difference:-1.8%),and major reintervention(RR:0.58,95%CI:0.35–0.98,P=0.04,DAPT of 803/205 events vs SAPT of 1197/4 events,risk difference:-42%).Bleeding showed no difference(RR:1.12,95%CI:0.42–3.03,P=0.82,DAPT of 195/2775 events vs SAPT of 202/8234 events).Heterogeneity was high(I^(2)=59%–97%).Quality revealed moderate to serious bias in cohorts and some concerns in RCTs;GRADE certainty moderate for cardiac mortality,myocardial infarction,reintervention,low for others due to inconsistency and imprecision.CONCLUSION DAPT reduces cardiac mortality,myocardial infarction,and major reintervention risks compared to SAPT in PAD post-revascularization without apparent bleeding increase,though limited by heterogeneity and low certainty for some outcomes.