The 2026 ACC Antiplatelet Statement: A Field Guide to Balancing Ischemia and Bleeding
What changed, what stayed the same, and what it costs — a high-yield synthesis for the practicing cardiologist.
The 2026 ACC Scientific Statement on antiplatelet therapy pulls together a decade of fragmented guidance into one document spanning primary prevention, acute coronary syndrome (ACS), peripheral artery disease (PAD), stroke, valve disease, and perioperative care.
Its central theme is not a single new drug but a philosophy: match antiplatelet intensity to a patient's ischemic risk trajectory, then de-escalate as that risk falls and bleeding risk does not.
Below is the condensed, point-of-care version.
Primary Prevention: Aspirin's Shrinking Lane
Aspirin remains the cheapest and most widely used antiplatelet available, but the statement is blunt about its limits in primary prevention.
A pooled meta-analysis of 13 trials and over 165,000 participants found a modest 11% relative reduction in cardiovascular events (HR 0.89) but a 43% relative increase in major bleeding.
The number needed to treat to prevent one event was 241, against a number needed to harm of 880 for intracranial hemorrhage specifically.
The statement's practical rule: consider low-dose aspirin only in adults aged 40–70 with elevated ischemic risk and low bleeding risk, and avoid routine use after age 70.
Coronary artery calcium scoring helps sharpen that decision, with scores ≥100–400 identifying patients most likely to see net benefit.
Choosing and Timing DAPT After ACS or PCI
For patients with ACS undergoing percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI), the statement favors prasugrel or ticagrelor over clopidogrel as the default P2Y12 inhibitor, based on the PLATO and TRITON-TIMI 38 trials.
Clopidogrel is preferred instead in patients over 75, given a higher bleeding risk with the more potent agents in that age group.
Default dual antiplatelet therapy (DAPT) duration is 12 months for ACS and 6 months for chronic coronary disease, with aspirin continued throughout the peri-PCI period.
A cluster of trials — TWILIGHT, TICO, and T-PASS — showed that dropping aspirin after 1–3 months and continuing the P2Y12 inhibitor alone cuts bleeding without a rise in ischemic events, but this evidence base applies mainly to ticagrelor, not clopidogrel.
Unguided de-escalation from ticagrelor or prasugrel down to clopidogrel at 1 month is a reasonable option in selected lower-risk patients who prioritize bleeding reduction.
| Setting | Default DAPT Duration | Early De-escalation Option |
|---|---|---|
| ACS + PCI | 12 months (aspirin + prasugrel/ticagrelor) | P2Y12 monotherapy at 1–3 mo (ticagrelor best supported) |
| Chronic coronary disease + PCI | 6 months (aspirin + clopidogrel) | P2Y12 monotherapy at 1–3 mo in selected patients |
| PAD, post-revascularization | 1–6 months | Single antiplatelet + low-dose rivaroxaban long term |
| Minor stroke / high-risk TIA | 21 days (aspirin + clopidogrel) | Antiplatelet monotherapy thereafter |
| CABG | Aspirin monotherapy is standard | DAPT lowers vein-graft failure only, at a bleeding cost |
A 68-year-old with a non-ST-elevation MI undergoes PCI with a drug-eluting stent and is discharged on aspirin plus ticagrelor.
At the 1-month visit she reports easy bruising and asks whether she really needs two blood thinners for a full year.
Using the statement's framework, her interventional cardiologist checks her ARC-HBR criteria, finds none met, and offers a evidence-based option: continue ticagrelor and drop aspirin now, per the TWILIGHT and TICO data, since her ischemic risk has already fallen substantially past the first month.
Long-Term Therapy Beyond One Year
Past the first year after ACS, the statement highlights emerging data that clopidogrel monotherapy may outperform aspirin monotherapy for secondary prevention, with similar or lower bleeding, based on HOST-EXAM 10-year follow-up and SMART-CHOICE 3.
For very high-risk patients with stable coronary or peripheral artery disease, adding low-dose rivaroxaban 2.5 mg twice daily to aspirin 81 mg daily is a reasonable long-term option, based on the COMPASS trial's reduction in MACE and total mortality.
This "vascular dose" strategy is not appropriate for anyone with a prior stroke or major bleeding history.
Special Populations in Brief
In PAD, shorter DAPT courses (1–6 months) are typical after revascularization, and low-dose rivaroxaban added to aspirin reduces both major cardiac and major limb events per VOYAGER-PAD.
In minor ischemic stroke or high-risk TIA, DAPT with aspirin and clopidogrel for 21 days beats aspirin alone for reducing recurrent stroke, after which therapy steps back down to monotherapy.
Triple therapy combining an anticoagulant with dual antiplatelets should be avoided; the default after PCI in a patient needing oral anticoagulation is a short aspirin run-in followed by an anticoagulant plus clopidogrel.
Patients with a bioprosthetic aortic or mitral valve typically do fine on single antiplatelet therapy (low-dose aspirin) long term, with no added benefit from routine DAPT or anticoagulation.
Monitoring, Interactions, and Adherence
CYP2C19 loss-of-function alleles reduce clopidogrel's active metabolite and raise thrombotic risk after PCI, though routine genotyping remains optional rather than mandated.
Concomitant omeprazole theoretically blunts clopidogrel's antiplatelet effect via shared CYP2C19 metabolism, but randomized data show no increase in ischemic events, so proton pump inhibitors are still recommended in patients at high bleeding risk.
Cost is a major driver of nonadherence: roughly one in four low-income families with ASCVD faces significant financial burden from medication costs, and early discontinuation of DAPT after MI raises the risk of stent thrombosis.
Generic clopidogrel is the cheapest option, generic ticagrelor and prasugrel are now increasingly available, and dose reduction of ticagrelor to 60 mg twice daily after the acute phase cuts nonadherence driven by bleeding and dyspnea without losing efficacy.
Drug and Device Reference Table
| Agent | Class | Approx. Monthly Cost (generic, GoodRx) | Maker (Ticker) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Clopidogrel (Plavix) | P2Y12 inhibitor | $5–$10 | Originator Sanofi SNY |
| Ticagrelor (Brilinta) | P2Y12 inhibitor | $23–$35 (generic); brand ~$460+ | AstraZeneca AZN |
| Prasugrel (Effient) | P2Y12 inhibitor | $14–$20 | Daiichi Sankyo / Eli Lilly LLY |
| Rivaroxaban 2.5 mg (Xarelto) | Factor Xa inhibitor, "vascular dose" | ~$37–$45 (generic 2.5 mg) | Johnson & Johnson/Janssen JNJ; co-marketed by Bayer |
| Aspirin, low dose | COX-1 inhibitor | Under $5 | Multiple generic manufacturers |
Antiplatelet strategy in 2026 is a moving target that shifts with time-since-event, not a fixed prescription written at discharge.
Start intensively when ischemic risk is highest, reassess bleeding risk at every visit using tools like ARC-HBR, and be willing to de-escalate once the first month or two has passed — especially with ticagrelor, where the evidence for early aspirin withdrawal is strongest.
Cost and adherence deserve the same attention as pharmacology, since a cheaper regimen a patient actually takes beats an optimal one they abandon.
References
- American College of Cardiology. Antiplatelet Therapy in the Management of Atherosclerotic Cardiovascular Disease: 2026 ACC Scientific Statement. J Am Coll Cardiol. 2026.
- Mehran R, Baber U, Sharma SK, et al. Ticagrelor with or without aspirin in high-risk patients after PCI (TWILIGHT). N Engl J Med. 2019;381:2032-2042.
- Eikelboom JW, Connolly SJ, Bosch J, et al. Rivaroxaban with or without aspirin in stable cardiovascular disease (COMPASS). N Engl J Med. 2017;377:1319-1330.
- Kang J, Park S, Yang H-M, et al. Aspirin versus clopidogrel for chronic maintenance monotherapy after PCI: 10-year follow-up of HOST-EXAM. Lancet. 2026;407:1439-1447.
- Zheng SL, Roddick AJ. Association of aspirin use for primary prevention with cardiovascular events and bleeding events: a systematic review and meta-analysis. JAMA. 2019;321:277-287.