Search Continues for the Safest Course
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ADOPT Nixes Extended Thromboprophylaxis in Medically Ill

ORLANDO – Prolonged thromboprophylaxis with 30 days of oral apixaban in initially hospitalized, acutely medically ill patients proved no more effective and caused more major bleeding than 6-14 days of enoxaparin in a major randomized clinical trial.

Results of the 6,528-patient Apixaban Dosing to Optimize Protection from Thrombosis (ADOPT) trial provided no support in the medically ill for the sort of multiweek extended prophylaxis against venous thromboembolism (VTE) that’s routine in patients undergoing total hip replacement or other high-risk orthopedic surgery. But the ADOPT trial is very unlikely to be the final word on this issue, according to lead investigator Dr. Samuel Z. Goldhaber, who presented the study findings in a late-breaking trials session Nov. 13 at the annual scientific sessions of the American Heart Association.

Observers agreed with this assessment. They commented that the 13% relative risk reduction in VTE-related events seen in the apixaban group, while falling short of statistical significance, was actually encouraging in light of a couple of study design problems that stacked the deck against the investigational oral direct factor Xa inhibitor. They predicted that better-designed studies of extended thromboprophylaxis with apixaban or the other new oral anticoagulants are likely to be in store.

ADOPT was a double-blind, placebo-controlled trial conducted at 302 centers in 35 countries. It involved restricted-mobility patients hospitalized for medical conditions placing them at increased VTE risk, including heart failure, respiratory failure, cancer, acute rheumatic disorders, infection, and inflammatory bowel disease. Participants were randomized to oral apixaban at 2.5 mg twice daily for 30 days or subcutaneous enoxaparin at 40 mg once daily for 6-14 days followed by placebo.

The primary efficacy end point was the 30-day composite of death related to VTE, fatal or nonfatal pulmonary embolism, symptomatic deep vein thrombosis, or asymptomatic proximal-leg deep vein thrombosis. This composite end point occurred in 2.71% of the apixaban group, compared with 3.06% in the enoxaparin arm, a 13% relative risk reduction.

The 30-day major bleeding rate was 0.47% in the apixaban group and 0.19% with enoxaparin. The resulting 2.58-fold increased relative risk of major bleeding in the apixaban group was significant.

"Apixaban is, in my mind, still a very attractive agent for the prevention of venous thrombosis."

A major study limitation was that one-third of the 6,528 participants couldn’t be evaluated for the primary efficacy end point, because they lacked a follow-up systematic bilateral compression ultrasound exam of the legs. As a result, the study was underpowered, and the 13% relative risk reduction didn’t achieve statistical significance.

The purpose of the follow-up ultrasound was to detect asymptomatic proximal-leg deep vein thrombosis. The Food and Drug Administration required that this be part of the primary efficacy end point, even though compression ultrasonography after hospital discharge isn’t routine practice and the clinical significance of asymptomatic VTEs remains unclear.

The other major problem with the ADOPT design was that the comparison arm didn’t reflect real-world clinical practice, which is to stop enoxaparin prophylaxis at the time medically ill patients are discharged. This is done because many frail, sick patients find self-injection of enoxaparin too daunting. In ADOPT, the average length of stay was 5 days, but patients in the enoxaparin arm were on the low-molecular-weight heparin for 6-14 days, again as requested by the FDA.

Dr. Goldhaber,a cardiologist at of Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston, noted that as soon as enoxaparin prophylaxis stopped, the rate of VTE events in that study arm took a 45-degree upturn. As a result, a key secondary study end point – the rate of symptomatic VTE or VTE-related death after parenteral enoxaparin was stopped – occurred in 0.56% of the enoxaparin arm compared with 0.25% in the apixaban arm. This difference represented a 56% relative risk reduction favoring apixaban, which just missed attaining significance. This finding suggests that a strategy of extending thromboprophylaxis for longer than 6-14 days shows considerable promise.

"I think ADOPT’s gift to the medical community is to point the way toward a future trial that does not require ultrasound unless the patient is symptomatic and in which the comparison group allows VTE prophylaxis as it is really practiced – giving it in the hospital and not post discharge as in ADOPT," he said.

Dr. Elliott Antman, chair of the scientific sessions program committee, predicted in an interview that such trials are likely to occur, given that pulmonary embolism causes at least 150,000 deaths per year in the United States alone.

"This is an important medical problem that needs to be adequately treated, and I don’t think we’re doing a good enough job now. I think if future trials restrict the end point to symptomatic venous thrombosis and the duration of treatment in the comparator arm is kept to the way we do it now, then we may see some real benefit for a drug like apixaban. Apixaban is, in my mind, still a very attractive agent for the prevention of venous thrombosis. We just need to learn how to design a trial to demonstrate what I think is the true benefit of these new oral anticoagulants," said Dr. Antman, professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School, Boston.

 

 

"There’s a lot of discussion in the clinical research community about the importance of these ultrasound-detected venous thromboses, whether they truly translate into something that may impact on a patient or they perhaps just go away on their own. Including them in a primary end point, as in the ADOPT study, is really questionable in my mind," he added.

"This is an important medical problem that needs to be adequately treated, and I don’t think we’re doing a good enough job now."

Dr. Mary Cushman said that going forward it will be critical to develop validated risk prediction models to identify the medical inpatients at highest risk for post-discharge VTE. That’s the right population to study in clinical trials.

The increased VTE risk in medically ill patients is known to extend for 3 months post discharge. An important question to address in future trials of the new oral factor Xa inhibitors is whether they should be utilized for that full 3-month risk period, rather than 1 month as in ADOPT, observed Dr. Cushman, professor of medicine and pathology at the University of Vermont, Burlington.

Dr. Goldhaber said he and his coinvestigators are now analyzing their nearly 7,000-patient database to identify key predictors of VTE for incorporation into a new risk prediction model.

Apixaban goes by the trade name of Eliquis in Europe, where the drug is approved for VTE prophylaxis in patients who have undergone total hip or knee replacement surgery. Eliquis is also the proposed trade name in the United States.

Apixaban in ADOPT failed to hit the home run it did earlier for stroke prevention in the setting of atrial fibrillation in the recently published, double-blind, randomized ARISTOTLE trial conducted in more than 18,000 patients. In ARISTOTLE, apixaban proved statistically significantly superior to warfarin in the key end points of prevention of stroke or systemic embolism, bleeding, and mortality (N. Engl. J. Med. 2011;365:981-92).

Simultaneous with Dr. Goldhaber’s presentation at the annual scientific sessions, ADOPT was published at http://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/nejmoa1110899 (doi:10.1056/NEJMoa1110899).

Dr. Goldhaber disclosed that he has served as a consultant to numerous pharmaceutical companies, including Bristol-Myers Squibb and Pfizer, which sponsored the ADOPT trial. Dr. Antman and Dr. Cushman declared having no relevant financial interests.

Body

The ADOPT trial is the third clinical trial

evaluating extended prophylaxis in medically ill patients after EXCLAIM

(comparing enoxaparin vs. placebo) in 5,963 medically ill patients and Magellan

(rivaroxaban vs. enoxaparin) in 8,101 medically ill patients.

The first two showed

superiority of an extended prophylaxis regimen—enoxaparin 40 mg subcutaneously once

a day (in EXCLAIM) and rivaroxaban 10mg daily in Magellan. However, both

occurred at the expense of major bleeding that was increased from 0.3% to 0.8%

with enoxaparin and from 0.4% to 1.1% with rivaroxaban.

ADOPT failed to show a

statistically significant difference in VTE with extended course of apixaban 2.5

mg SC twice daily, compared with enoxaparin 40 mg SC dosed once daily for 6-14

days. This finding was different from the other two trials. The trial was

underpowered for the primary efficacy end point because it lacked follow-up

with a systematic bilateral compression ultrasound exam in a third of the

patients.

However, similar to the

other two trials, ADOPT, too, showed increased rate of major bleeding. The

rates were 0.47% in the apixaban arm and only 0.19% in the enoxaparin arm, highlighting

yet again that extended prophylaxis is not safe in the medically ill

population.

    



Dr. Amir K. Jaffer

At this time, therefore,

extended prophylaxis with enoxaparin 40 mg SC once daily for up to 28 days

should be reserved for a highly select and significantly immobilized medically

ill group with age > 75 years,

history of VTE or history of cancer based upon findings from EXCLAIM while

neither rivaroxaban nor apixaban are yet FDA approved for VTE prevention in

medically ill patients.

In the meantime, the safest regimen and the

optimal duration of VTE prophylaxis therapy for the medically ill patients in

an age of a shorter and shorter length of stay remains elusive. The situation

holds research opportunities for hospitalists.

DR. AMIR K. JAFFER

is division chief of hospital medicine at the University of Miami. Dr. Jaffer stated he has no conflicts of interest.

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thromboprophylaxis, apixaban ADOPT, enoxaparin VTE, ADOPT trial, venous thromboembolism risk, enoxaparin prophylaxis, venous thromboses
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Body

The ADOPT trial is the third clinical trial

evaluating extended prophylaxis in medically ill patients after EXCLAIM

(comparing enoxaparin vs. placebo) in 5,963 medically ill patients and Magellan

(rivaroxaban vs. enoxaparin) in 8,101 medically ill patients.

The first two showed

superiority of an extended prophylaxis regimen—enoxaparin 40 mg subcutaneously once

a day (in EXCLAIM) and rivaroxaban 10mg daily in Magellan. However, both

occurred at the expense of major bleeding that was increased from 0.3% to 0.8%

with enoxaparin and from 0.4% to 1.1% with rivaroxaban.

ADOPT failed to show a

statistically significant difference in VTE with extended course of apixaban 2.5

mg SC twice daily, compared with enoxaparin 40 mg SC dosed once daily for 6-14

days. This finding was different from the other two trials. The trial was

underpowered for the primary efficacy end point because it lacked follow-up

with a systematic bilateral compression ultrasound exam in a third of the

patients.

However, similar to the

other two trials, ADOPT, too, showed increased rate of major bleeding. The

rates were 0.47% in the apixaban arm and only 0.19% in the enoxaparin arm, highlighting

yet again that extended prophylaxis is not safe in the medically ill

population.

    



Dr. Amir K. Jaffer

At this time, therefore,

extended prophylaxis with enoxaparin 40 mg SC once daily for up to 28 days

should be reserved for a highly select and significantly immobilized medically

ill group with age > 75 years,

history of VTE or history of cancer based upon findings from EXCLAIM while

neither rivaroxaban nor apixaban are yet FDA approved for VTE prevention in

medically ill patients.

In the meantime, the safest regimen and the

optimal duration of VTE prophylaxis therapy for the medically ill patients in

an age of a shorter and shorter length of stay remains elusive. The situation

holds research opportunities for hospitalists.

DR. AMIR K. JAFFER

is division chief of hospital medicine at the University of Miami. Dr. Jaffer stated he has no conflicts of interest.

Body

The ADOPT trial is the third clinical trial

evaluating extended prophylaxis in medically ill patients after EXCLAIM

(comparing enoxaparin vs. placebo) in 5,963 medically ill patients and Magellan

(rivaroxaban vs. enoxaparin) in 8,101 medically ill patients.

The first two showed

superiority of an extended prophylaxis regimen—enoxaparin 40 mg subcutaneously once

a day (in EXCLAIM) and rivaroxaban 10mg daily in Magellan. However, both

occurred at the expense of major bleeding that was increased from 0.3% to 0.8%

with enoxaparin and from 0.4% to 1.1% with rivaroxaban.

ADOPT failed to show a

statistically significant difference in VTE with extended course of apixaban 2.5

mg SC twice daily, compared with enoxaparin 40 mg SC dosed once daily for 6-14

days. This finding was different from the other two trials. The trial was

underpowered for the primary efficacy end point because it lacked follow-up

with a systematic bilateral compression ultrasound exam in a third of the

patients.

However, similar to the

other two trials, ADOPT, too, showed increased rate of major bleeding. The

rates were 0.47% in the apixaban arm and only 0.19% in the enoxaparin arm, highlighting

yet again that extended prophylaxis is not safe in the medically ill

population.

    



Dr. Amir K. Jaffer

At this time, therefore,

extended prophylaxis with enoxaparin 40 mg SC once daily for up to 28 days

should be reserved for a highly select and significantly immobilized medically

ill group with age > 75 years,

history of VTE or history of cancer based upon findings from EXCLAIM while

neither rivaroxaban nor apixaban are yet FDA approved for VTE prevention in

medically ill patients.

In the meantime, the safest regimen and the

optimal duration of VTE prophylaxis therapy for the medically ill patients in

an age of a shorter and shorter length of stay remains elusive. The situation

holds research opportunities for hospitalists.

DR. AMIR K. JAFFER

is division chief of hospital medicine at the University of Miami. Dr. Jaffer stated he has no conflicts of interest.

Title
Search Continues for the Safest Course
Search Continues for the Safest Course

ORLANDO – Prolonged thromboprophylaxis with 30 days of oral apixaban in initially hospitalized, acutely medically ill patients proved no more effective and caused more major bleeding than 6-14 days of enoxaparin in a major randomized clinical trial.

Results of the 6,528-patient Apixaban Dosing to Optimize Protection from Thrombosis (ADOPT) trial provided no support in the medically ill for the sort of multiweek extended prophylaxis against venous thromboembolism (VTE) that’s routine in patients undergoing total hip replacement or other high-risk orthopedic surgery. But the ADOPT trial is very unlikely to be the final word on this issue, according to lead investigator Dr. Samuel Z. Goldhaber, who presented the study findings in a late-breaking trials session Nov. 13 at the annual scientific sessions of the American Heart Association.

Observers agreed with this assessment. They commented that the 13% relative risk reduction in VTE-related events seen in the apixaban group, while falling short of statistical significance, was actually encouraging in light of a couple of study design problems that stacked the deck against the investigational oral direct factor Xa inhibitor. They predicted that better-designed studies of extended thromboprophylaxis with apixaban or the other new oral anticoagulants are likely to be in store.

ADOPT was a double-blind, placebo-controlled trial conducted at 302 centers in 35 countries. It involved restricted-mobility patients hospitalized for medical conditions placing them at increased VTE risk, including heart failure, respiratory failure, cancer, acute rheumatic disorders, infection, and inflammatory bowel disease. Participants were randomized to oral apixaban at 2.5 mg twice daily for 30 days or subcutaneous enoxaparin at 40 mg once daily for 6-14 days followed by placebo.

The primary efficacy end point was the 30-day composite of death related to VTE, fatal or nonfatal pulmonary embolism, symptomatic deep vein thrombosis, or asymptomatic proximal-leg deep vein thrombosis. This composite end point occurred in 2.71% of the apixaban group, compared with 3.06% in the enoxaparin arm, a 13% relative risk reduction.

The 30-day major bleeding rate was 0.47% in the apixaban group and 0.19% with enoxaparin. The resulting 2.58-fold increased relative risk of major bleeding in the apixaban group was significant.

"Apixaban is, in my mind, still a very attractive agent for the prevention of venous thrombosis."

A major study limitation was that one-third of the 6,528 participants couldn’t be evaluated for the primary efficacy end point, because they lacked a follow-up systematic bilateral compression ultrasound exam of the legs. As a result, the study was underpowered, and the 13% relative risk reduction didn’t achieve statistical significance.

The purpose of the follow-up ultrasound was to detect asymptomatic proximal-leg deep vein thrombosis. The Food and Drug Administration required that this be part of the primary efficacy end point, even though compression ultrasonography after hospital discharge isn’t routine practice and the clinical significance of asymptomatic VTEs remains unclear.

The other major problem with the ADOPT design was that the comparison arm didn’t reflect real-world clinical practice, which is to stop enoxaparin prophylaxis at the time medically ill patients are discharged. This is done because many frail, sick patients find self-injection of enoxaparin too daunting. In ADOPT, the average length of stay was 5 days, but patients in the enoxaparin arm were on the low-molecular-weight heparin for 6-14 days, again as requested by the FDA.

Dr. Goldhaber,a cardiologist at of Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston, noted that as soon as enoxaparin prophylaxis stopped, the rate of VTE events in that study arm took a 45-degree upturn. As a result, a key secondary study end point – the rate of symptomatic VTE or VTE-related death after parenteral enoxaparin was stopped – occurred in 0.56% of the enoxaparin arm compared with 0.25% in the apixaban arm. This difference represented a 56% relative risk reduction favoring apixaban, which just missed attaining significance. This finding suggests that a strategy of extending thromboprophylaxis for longer than 6-14 days shows considerable promise.

"I think ADOPT’s gift to the medical community is to point the way toward a future trial that does not require ultrasound unless the patient is symptomatic and in which the comparison group allows VTE prophylaxis as it is really practiced – giving it in the hospital and not post discharge as in ADOPT," he said.

Dr. Elliott Antman, chair of the scientific sessions program committee, predicted in an interview that such trials are likely to occur, given that pulmonary embolism causes at least 150,000 deaths per year in the United States alone.

"This is an important medical problem that needs to be adequately treated, and I don’t think we’re doing a good enough job now. I think if future trials restrict the end point to symptomatic venous thrombosis and the duration of treatment in the comparator arm is kept to the way we do it now, then we may see some real benefit for a drug like apixaban. Apixaban is, in my mind, still a very attractive agent for the prevention of venous thrombosis. We just need to learn how to design a trial to demonstrate what I think is the true benefit of these new oral anticoagulants," said Dr. Antman, professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School, Boston.

 

 

"There’s a lot of discussion in the clinical research community about the importance of these ultrasound-detected venous thromboses, whether they truly translate into something that may impact on a patient or they perhaps just go away on their own. Including them in a primary end point, as in the ADOPT study, is really questionable in my mind," he added.

"This is an important medical problem that needs to be adequately treated, and I don’t think we’re doing a good enough job now."

Dr. Mary Cushman said that going forward it will be critical to develop validated risk prediction models to identify the medical inpatients at highest risk for post-discharge VTE. That’s the right population to study in clinical trials.

The increased VTE risk in medically ill patients is known to extend for 3 months post discharge. An important question to address in future trials of the new oral factor Xa inhibitors is whether they should be utilized for that full 3-month risk period, rather than 1 month as in ADOPT, observed Dr. Cushman, professor of medicine and pathology at the University of Vermont, Burlington.

Dr. Goldhaber said he and his coinvestigators are now analyzing their nearly 7,000-patient database to identify key predictors of VTE for incorporation into a new risk prediction model.

Apixaban goes by the trade name of Eliquis in Europe, where the drug is approved for VTE prophylaxis in patients who have undergone total hip or knee replacement surgery. Eliquis is also the proposed trade name in the United States.

Apixaban in ADOPT failed to hit the home run it did earlier for stroke prevention in the setting of atrial fibrillation in the recently published, double-blind, randomized ARISTOTLE trial conducted in more than 18,000 patients. In ARISTOTLE, apixaban proved statistically significantly superior to warfarin in the key end points of prevention of stroke or systemic embolism, bleeding, and mortality (N. Engl. J. Med. 2011;365:981-92).

Simultaneous with Dr. Goldhaber’s presentation at the annual scientific sessions, ADOPT was published at http://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/nejmoa1110899 (doi:10.1056/NEJMoa1110899).

Dr. Goldhaber disclosed that he has served as a consultant to numerous pharmaceutical companies, including Bristol-Myers Squibb and Pfizer, which sponsored the ADOPT trial. Dr. Antman and Dr. Cushman declared having no relevant financial interests.

ORLANDO – Prolonged thromboprophylaxis with 30 days of oral apixaban in initially hospitalized, acutely medically ill patients proved no more effective and caused more major bleeding than 6-14 days of enoxaparin in a major randomized clinical trial.

Results of the 6,528-patient Apixaban Dosing to Optimize Protection from Thrombosis (ADOPT) trial provided no support in the medically ill for the sort of multiweek extended prophylaxis against venous thromboembolism (VTE) that’s routine in patients undergoing total hip replacement or other high-risk orthopedic surgery. But the ADOPT trial is very unlikely to be the final word on this issue, according to lead investigator Dr. Samuel Z. Goldhaber, who presented the study findings in a late-breaking trials session Nov. 13 at the annual scientific sessions of the American Heart Association.

Observers agreed with this assessment. They commented that the 13% relative risk reduction in VTE-related events seen in the apixaban group, while falling short of statistical significance, was actually encouraging in light of a couple of study design problems that stacked the deck against the investigational oral direct factor Xa inhibitor. They predicted that better-designed studies of extended thromboprophylaxis with apixaban or the other new oral anticoagulants are likely to be in store.

ADOPT was a double-blind, placebo-controlled trial conducted at 302 centers in 35 countries. It involved restricted-mobility patients hospitalized for medical conditions placing them at increased VTE risk, including heart failure, respiratory failure, cancer, acute rheumatic disorders, infection, and inflammatory bowel disease. Participants were randomized to oral apixaban at 2.5 mg twice daily for 30 days or subcutaneous enoxaparin at 40 mg once daily for 6-14 days followed by placebo.

The primary efficacy end point was the 30-day composite of death related to VTE, fatal or nonfatal pulmonary embolism, symptomatic deep vein thrombosis, or asymptomatic proximal-leg deep vein thrombosis. This composite end point occurred in 2.71% of the apixaban group, compared with 3.06% in the enoxaparin arm, a 13% relative risk reduction.

The 30-day major bleeding rate was 0.47% in the apixaban group and 0.19% with enoxaparin. The resulting 2.58-fold increased relative risk of major bleeding in the apixaban group was significant.

"Apixaban is, in my mind, still a very attractive agent for the prevention of venous thrombosis."

A major study limitation was that one-third of the 6,528 participants couldn’t be evaluated for the primary efficacy end point, because they lacked a follow-up systematic bilateral compression ultrasound exam of the legs. As a result, the study was underpowered, and the 13% relative risk reduction didn’t achieve statistical significance.

The purpose of the follow-up ultrasound was to detect asymptomatic proximal-leg deep vein thrombosis. The Food and Drug Administration required that this be part of the primary efficacy end point, even though compression ultrasonography after hospital discharge isn’t routine practice and the clinical significance of asymptomatic VTEs remains unclear.

The other major problem with the ADOPT design was that the comparison arm didn’t reflect real-world clinical practice, which is to stop enoxaparin prophylaxis at the time medically ill patients are discharged. This is done because many frail, sick patients find self-injection of enoxaparin too daunting. In ADOPT, the average length of stay was 5 days, but patients in the enoxaparin arm were on the low-molecular-weight heparin for 6-14 days, again as requested by the FDA.

Dr. Goldhaber,a cardiologist at of Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston, noted that as soon as enoxaparin prophylaxis stopped, the rate of VTE events in that study arm took a 45-degree upturn. As a result, a key secondary study end point – the rate of symptomatic VTE or VTE-related death after parenteral enoxaparin was stopped – occurred in 0.56% of the enoxaparin arm compared with 0.25% in the apixaban arm. This difference represented a 56% relative risk reduction favoring apixaban, which just missed attaining significance. This finding suggests that a strategy of extending thromboprophylaxis for longer than 6-14 days shows considerable promise.

"I think ADOPT’s gift to the medical community is to point the way toward a future trial that does not require ultrasound unless the patient is symptomatic and in which the comparison group allows VTE prophylaxis as it is really practiced – giving it in the hospital and not post discharge as in ADOPT," he said.

Dr. Elliott Antman, chair of the scientific sessions program committee, predicted in an interview that such trials are likely to occur, given that pulmonary embolism causes at least 150,000 deaths per year in the United States alone.

"This is an important medical problem that needs to be adequately treated, and I don’t think we’re doing a good enough job now. I think if future trials restrict the end point to symptomatic venous thrombosis and the duration of treatment in the comparator arm is kept to the way we do it now, then we may see some real benefit for a drug like apixaban. Apixaban is, in my mind, still a very attractive agent for the prevention of venous thrombosis. We just need to learn how to design a trial to demonstrate what I think is the true benefit of these new oral anticoagulants," said Dr. Antman, professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School, Boston.

 

 

"There’s a lot of discussion in the clinical research community about the importance of these ultrasound-detected venous thromboses, whether they truly translate into something that may impact on a patient or they perhaps just go away on their own. Including them in a primary end point, as in the ADOPT study, is really questionable in my mind," he added.

"This is an important medical problem that needs to be adequately treated, and I don’t think we’re doing a good enough job now."

Dr. Mary Cushman said that going forward it will be critical to develop validated risk prediction models to identify the medical inpatients at highest risk for post-discharge VTE. That’s the right population to study in clinical trials.

The increased VTE risk in medically ill patients is known to extend for 3 months post discharge. An important question to address in future trials of the new oral factor Xa inhibitors is whether they should be utilized for that full 3-month risk period, rather than 1 month as in ADOPT, observed Dr. Cushman, professor of medicine and pathology at the University of Vermont, Burlington.

Dr. Goldhaber said he and his coinvestigators are now analyzing their nearly 7,000-patient database to identify key predictors of VTE for incorporation into a new risk prediction model.

Apixaban goes by the trade name of Eliquis in Europe, where the drug is approved for VTE prophylaxis in patients who have undergone total hip or knee replacement surgery. Eliquis is also the proposed trade name in the United States.

Apixaban in ADOPT failed to hit the home run it did earlier for stroke prevention in the setting of atrial fibrillation in the recently published, double-blind, randomized ARISTOTLE trial conducted in more than 18,000 patients. In ARISTOTLE, apixaban proved statistically significantly superior to warfarin in the key end points of prevention of stroke or systemic embolism, bleeding, and mortality (N. Engl. J. Med. 2011;365:981-92).

Simultaneous with Dr. Goldhaber’s presentation at the annual scientific sessions, ADOPT was published at http://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/nejmoa1110899 (doi:10.1056/NEJMoa1110899).

Dr. Goldhaber disclosed that he has served as a consultant to numerous pharmaceutical companies, including Bristol-Myers Squibb and Pfizer, which sponsored the ADOPT trial. Dr. Antman and Dr. Cushman declared having no relevant financial interests.

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ADOPT Nixes Extended Thromboprophylaxis in Medically Ill
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ADOPT Nixes Extended Thromboprophylaxis in Medically Ill
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thromboprophylaxis, apixaban ADOPT, enoxaparin VTE, ADOPT trial, venous thromboembolism risk, enoxaparin prophylaxis, venous thromboses
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thromboprophylaxis, apixaban ADOPT, enoxaparin VTE, ADOPT trial, venous thromboembolism risk, enoxaparin prophylaxis, venous thromboses
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FROM THE ANNUAL SCIENTIFIC SESSIONS OF THE AMERICAN HEART ASSOCIATION

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Inside the Article

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Major Finding: Thirty days of the oral direct factor Xa inhibitor apixaban proved no more effective than 6-12 days of enoxaparin in preventing venous thromboembolism–related events in initially hospitalized medically ill patients in a large randomized trial. But observers believe flaws in the study design that were mandated by the Food and Drug Administration may have masked a true benefit for extended out-of-hospital prophylaxis with apixaban.

Data Source: The 6,528-patient ADOPT trial.

Disclosures: Dr. Goldhaber disclosed that he has served as a consultant to numerous pharmaceutical companies, including Bristol-Myers Squibb and Pfizer, which sponsored the ADOPT trial. Dr. Antman and Dr. Cushman declared having no relevant financial interests.