Apixaban superior to warfarin for preventing stroke, reducing bleeding and saving lives

The results were presented by Duke University Medical Center researchers at the European Society of Cardiology in Paris, France, today, and published simultaneously online in the New England Journal of Medicine.

“These are important findings because they show that, when compared to warfarin, a very effective treatment to prevent stroke, apixaban resulted in an additional 21 percent relative reduction in stroke or systemic embolism,” says Christopher B. Granger, M.D., the study's lead author and professor of medicine at Duke. “It also resulted in a 31 percent relative reduction in major bleeding, as well as an 11 percent relative reduction in overall mortality.”

The improvement in stroke prevention was statistically significant with P=0.011, the lower rate of major bleeding at P

The randomized, double-blind clinical trial known as ARISTOTLE randomized 18,201 patients at 1034 clinical sites in 39 countries, giving them either 5 mg twice daily of apixaban or warfarin for an average of 1.8 years.

Apixaban has several major practical advantages over warfarin in addition to the therapeutic benefits, says John Alexander, M.D., a study co-author and Duke cardiologist. “It does not require monitoring and has few interactions with other medications or food. Apixaban was better tolerated than warfarin, with fewer discontinuations.”

The benefits of reducing stroke and lower rates of bleeding were consistent across all major subgroups, and despite the heterogeneity that exists in the quality of warfarin use across the world, says Alexander.

The number of events prevented per 1,000 people, which indicate absolute risk reduction, was also impressive, says Alexander. Apixaban prevented 6 patients from having a stroke, 15 patients from having major bleeding, and 8 patients from dying. The major effect on stroke prevention was on hemorrhagic stroke. Apixaban prevented 4 patients from having hemorrhagic stroke and 2 patients from having an ischemic or uncertain type of stroke.

Atrial fibrillation is a common abnormal heart rhythm that affects more than 2.6 million Americans. It occurs when the heart's electrical activity becomes disorganized, resulting in an irregular heartbeat with ineffective contraction of the upper chambers of the heart. The potential for blood clots to form, and one's risk for stroke, increases as a result.

Warfarin is a vitamin K antagonist that is well documented for its ability to prevent blood clots. Previous studies indicate that long-term use of warfarin in patients with atrial fibrillation and other stroke risk factors can reduce stroke by up to 70 percent. But only about half of patients who could benefit from warfarin actually do. Patients on warfarin must have regular blood tests to monitor and adjust the dose and avoid certain foods and medications that interfere with warfarin's effect. Warfarin also increases bleeding rusj including including intracranial hemorrhage.

“There is an enormous unmet need for treatment of patients at risk for stroke associated with atrial fibrillation,” says Granger. “Only about half of patients who should be treated are being treated. The disparity exists because warfarin treatment has several limitations.”

Doctors and patients have been eagerly awaiting alternative therapies to warfarin, one of which is currently available. Several others are currently under investigation in large clinical trials.

Apixaban is an oral direct factor Xa inhibitor that showed promise last year when trial findings presented at the European Society of Cardiology showed apixaban patients were 54 percent less likely to have a stroke or blood clot than those who took aspirin. Apixaban and aspirin showed similar risks of major bleeding.

“Our study indicates treatment with apixaban is more effective than warfarin in preventing stroke without the need for anticoagulation monitoring,” says Lars Wallentin, M.D., the study committee's co-chair, professor of cardiology, and director of the Uppsala Clinical Research Center University Hospital in Sweden.

The study also shows apixaban is safer than warfarin, according to Wallentin. “Our findings show a single dose of apixaban accomplishes the same stroke prevention goal as adjusted-dose warfarin with a substantially lower risk of all types of bleeding across different ages, and with lower rates of discontinuation.”

The study was coordinated by Uppsala Clinical Research Institute, Sweden and the Duke Clinical Research Institute.

It was funded by Bristol-Myers Squibb, Co and Pfizer Inc.

Additional study authors include: John J. V. McMurray, M.D., Cardiovascular Research Centre, University of Glasgow; Renato Lopes, DCRI; Elaine Hylek, Boston University; Michael Hanna, BMS; Hussein Al-Khalidi, DCRI; Jack Ansell, Lenox Hill Hospital; Dan Atar, Oslo University Hospital; Alvaro Avezum, Dante Pazzanese Institute of Cardiology; M. Bahit, ECLA Estudios Cardiologicos Latinoamerica; Rafael Diaz, ECLA Estudios Cardiologicos Latinoamerica; J. Donald Easton, Brown University; Justin Ezekowitz, University of Alberta; Greg Flaker, University of Missouri Health Care; David Garcia, University of New Mexico; Margarida Geraldes, BMS; Bernard Gersh, Mayo Clinic; Sergey Golitsyn, Russian Cardiology Research Center; Shinya Goto, Tokai University School of Medicine; J. Antonio Gonzalez-Hermosillo; Instituo N de Cardiologia Ignacio Chavez; Stefan Hohnloser, J.W. Goethe University; John Horowitz, University of Adelaide; Puneet Mohan, BMS; Petr Jansky, Motol University Hospital; Basil Lewis, Lady Davis Carmel Medical Center; Jose Lopez-Sendon, La Paz University Hospital; Prem Pais, St. John's Medical College; Alexander Parkhomenko, Institute of Cardiology; Freek Verheugt, Radboud University Nijmegen Medical Centre; Jun Zhu, Fuwai Hospital

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