Article (Scientific journals)
Oral rivaroxaban for symptomatic venous thromboembolism.
EINSTEIN Investigators; Bauersachs, Rupert; Berkowitz, Scott D et al.
2010In New England Journal of Medicine, 363 (26), p. 2499 - 2510
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Keywords :
Anticoagulants; Enoxaparin; Factor Xa Inhibitors; Morpholines; Thiophenes; Vitamin K; Warfarin; Rivaroxaban; Acenocoumarol; Acenocoumarol/adverse effects; Acenocoumarol/therapeutic use; Acute Disease; Administration, Oral; Aged; Anticoagulants/adverse effects; Anticoagulants/therapeutic use; Double-Blind Method; Enoxaparin/adverse effects; Enoxaparin/therapeutic use; Female; Hemorrhage/chemically induced; Humans; Injections, Subcutaneous; Intention to Treat Analysis; Kaplan-Meier Estimate; Male; Middle Aged; Morpholines/adverse effects; Morpholines/therapeutic use; Pulmonary Embolism/drug therapy; Thiophenes/adverse effects; Thiophenes/therapeutic use; Venous Thromboembolism/drug therapy; Venous Thrombosis/drug therapy; Vitamin K/antagonists & inhibitors; Warfarin/adverse effects; Warfarin/therapeutic use; Medicine (all)
Abstract :
[en] [en] BACKGROUND: Rivaroxaban, an oral factor Xa inhibitor, may provide a simple, fixed-dose regimen for treating acute deep-vein thrombosis (DVT) and for continued treatment, without the need for laboratory monitoring. METHODS: We conducted an open-label, randomized, event-driven, noninferiority study that compared oral rivaroxaban alone (15 mg twice daily for 3 weeks, followed by 20 mg once daily) with subcutaneous enoxaparin followed by a vitamin K antagonist (either warfarin or acenocoumarol) for 3, 6, or 12 months in patients with acute, symptomatic DVT. In parallel, we carried out a double-blind, randomized, event-driven superiority study that compared rivaroxaban alone (20 mg once daily) with placebo for an additional 6 or 12 months in patients who had completed 6 to 12 months of treatment for venous thromboembolism. The primary efficacy outcome for both studies was recurrent venous thromboembolism. The principal safety outcome was major bleeding or clinically relevant nonmajor bleeding in the initial-treatment study and major bleeding in the continued-treatment study. RESULTS: The study of rivaroxaban for acute DVT included 3449 patients: 1731 given rivaroxaban and 1718 given enoxaparin plus a vitamin K antagonist. Rivaroxaban had noninferior efficacy with respect to the primary outcome (36 events [2.1%], vs. 51 events with enoxaparin-vitamin K antagonist [3.0%]; hazard ratio, 0.68; 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.44 to 1.04; P<0.001). The principal safety outcome occurred in 8.1% of the patients in each group. In the continued-treatment study, which included 602 patients in the rivaroxaban group and 594 in the placebo group, rivaroxaban had superior efficacy (8 events [1.3%], vs. 42 with placebo [7.1%]; hazard ratio, 0.18; 95% CI, 0.09 to 0.39; P<0.001). Four patients in the rivaroxaban group had nonfatal major bleeding (0.7%), versus none in the placebo group (P=0.11). CONCLUSIONS: Rivaroxaban offers a simple, single-drug approach to the short-term and continued treatment of venous thrombosis that may improve the benefit-to-risk profile of anticoagulation. (Funded by Bayer Schering Pharma and Ortho-McNeil; ClinicalTrials.gov numbers, NCT00440193 and NCT00439725.).
Disciplines :
Cardiovascular & respiratory systems
Author, co-author :
EINSTEIN Investigators
Bauersachs, Rupert
Berkowitz, Scott D
Brenner, Benjamin
Buller, Harry R
Decousus, Hervé
Gallus, Alex S
Lensing, Anthonie W
Misselwitz, Frank
Prins, Martin H
Raskob, Gary E
Segers, Annelise
Verhamme, Peter
Wells, Phil
Agnelli, Giancarlo
Bounameaux, Henri
Cohen, Alexander
Davidson, Bruce L
Piovella, Franco
Schellong, Sebastian
Sprynger, Muriel ;  Université de Liège - ULiège > Département des sciences cliniques
More authors (11 more) Less
Language :
English
Title :
Oral rivaroxaban for symptomatic venous thromboembolism.
Publication date :
23 December 2010
Journal title :
New England Journal of Medicine
ISSN :
0028-4793
eISSN :
1533-4406
Publisher :
Massachussetts Medical Society, United States
Volume :
363
Issue :
26
Pages :
2499 - 2510
Peer reviewed :
Peer Reviewed verified by ORBi
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