Background: Antithrombotic therapy in acute patients with both high ischaemic and bleeding risks remains challenging.
Case summary: We presented a challenging case involving a 48-year-old man referred to our hospital for headache and a left superior quadrantanopia. A CT scan revealed a right inferior occipital lobe ischaemic stroke. During the hospital stay, the patients developed pulmonary embolism (PE), and ST-elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI). A triple antithrombotic therapy was indicated, but the patient presented with high bleeding (anaemia, active malignancy, ischaemic stroke) and ischaemic (ischaemic stroke, PE, and superimposed STEMI) risks. In this critical acute setting, prolonged cangrelor infusion of reduced dosage, coupled with aspirin and enoxaparin, proved an effective and safe antithrombotic approach.
Discussion: Prolonged cangrelor bridging at a reduced dose of 0.75 μg/kg/min may represent an effective and safe option in acute patients requiring P2Y12 inhibition and presenting both high ischaemic and high bleeding risks.
Keywords: Acute ischaemic stroke; Bleeding risk; Cangrelor; Case report; Ischaemic risk; Pulmonary embolism; STEMI.
© The Author(s) 2024. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the European Society of Cardiology.