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Thrombosis Management in Cardiology: The relevance of direct Factor Xa inhibition Prevention and Treatment of Venous Thromboembolism Alexander G G Turpie Professor of Medicine McMaster University Hamilton ON Canada
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2 2 1.Goldhaber SZ Am Coll Cardiol. 1992;19:246-247 2.Heit JA,et al ASH Annual Meeting Abstracts 2005;106:910 3.Cohen AT, et al. Thromb Haemost 2007;98:756−64 4.Cohen AT. Poster ISPOR 8th, 2005 3 rd most common cardiovascular disease world-wide after ischaemic heart disease and stroke 1 Causes ~300,000 deaths in the United States and over 500,000 deaths in Europe per year 2,3 In the EU, more than twice as many people die from VTE than from AIDS, breast cancer, prostate cancer and transportation accidents combined 3 3.1 billion Euros per year total estimated costs for VTE-associated care 4 VTE is a Serious Disease that Affects Hundreds of Thousands People each Year
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3 Known Consequences of VTE Increased future risk of recurrent VTE 3-10% recurrent VTE at 1-year 1 Chronic post-thrombotic syndrome (PTS) Fatal Pulmonary Embolism (PE) Chronic thromboembolic pulmonary hypertension Markedly increased risk of disability and reduced quality of life for the patient Costs of investigating and treating add considerable healthcare costs 1,3 3 1.Kearon C. Circulation. 2003;107(23 Suppl 1):I22 I30. 2.Cohen AT, et al. Thromb Haemost 2007;98:756–764. 3.Ginsberg JS, et al. Arch Intern Med. 2000;160:669 672. Pulmonary embolus Deep Venous Thromboembolism (DVT)
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4 PTS is a Relatively Common but Serious Complication PTS occurs in nearly one-third of pts within 5 years of initial DVT 1 DVT-induced valvular incompetence leads to lower limb hypertension 2 PTS is characterized by 3 : Pain Odema Hyperpigmentation Eczema Varicose collateral veins Severe PTS can lead to intractable, painful venous leg ulcers requiring ongoing nursing and medical care 4 4 © Diepgen TL, et al. Dermatology Online Atlas (Reprinted with permission). 1.Prandoni P, et al. Ann Intern Med. 1996;125:1–7. 2.Kahn SR, et al. Arch Intern Med. 2004;164:17–26. 3. Kahn SR. J Thromb Thrombolysis. 2006; 21(1) 41-48. 4. Kahn SR, et al. J Gen Intern Med. 2000;15:425–429.
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5 Desired Characteristics of New Oral Anticoagulants for VTE Treatment Simplify VTE treatment strategies: one oral anticoagulant for the entire duration of treatment / secondary prevention Eliminate the need for bridging / switching from a parenteral to an oral anticoagulant Reduce the length of hospital stay/facilitate earlier hospital discharge Offer healthcare savings through an improved benefit–risk profile
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6 6 Prothrombin FibrinFibrinogen Thrombin Dabigatran and others Factor Xa Rivaroxaban Apixaban, Endoxaban and others Factor X Prothrombinase- complex Phospholipids Factor Va – Factor Xa Ca 2+ Factor IX Factor IXa Factor VIIa Tissue factor Phospholipids Ca 2+ Factor IXa Factor VIIIa Phospholipids Ca 2+ Initiation phase Propagation phase = thrombin-generation phase Thrombin phase New Drugs in Phase III Development Directly Targeting Coagulation Factors Adapted from: Kubitza & Haas. Expert Opin Investig Drugs 2006
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7 Rivaroxaban Proven VTE Prevention in Adult Patients Undergoing THR and TKR Eriksson BI et al. N Engl J Med 2008; 358:2765–2775 Kakkar AK et al. Lancet 2008; 372:31–39 Lassen MR et al. N Engl J Med 2008; 358:2776–2786 Turpie AGG et al. Lancet 2009; 373:1673–1680 THR*: Oral rivaroxaban superior to sc enoxaparin in VTE prevention THR: Oral rivaroxaban long-term superior to enoxaparin short-term in VTE prevention TKR*: Oral rivaroxaban superior to sc enoxaparin in VTE prevention TKR: Oral rivaroxaban superior to bid sc enoxaparin in VTE prevention 7 *THR: Total Hip Replacement, TKR: Total Knee Replacement
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8 1. Eriksson et al. New Engl J Med 2008; 2. Kakkar et al. Lancet 2008; 3. Lassen et al. New Engl J Med 2008; 4. Turpie et al. Lancet 2009 Enoxaparin Rivaroxaban 10 mg od Mandatory bilateral venography Mandatory bilateral venography R 6–8 hours post-surgery in all RECORD studies Day 1 Double blind Last dose, day before venography Study Rivaroxaban therapy Dose Duration Enoxaparin therapy Dose Duration THR10 mg od5 weeks40 mg od5 weeks 1 THR10 mg od5 weeks40 mg od2 weeks *2 TKR10 mg od2 weeks40 mg od2 weeks 3 TKR10 mg od2 weeks30 mg bid2 weeks 4 * Followed by oral placebo for 3 weeks RECORD1–3: Evening before surgery RECORD4: 12–24 hours post-surgery RECORD Phase III Programme: Study Design SURGERYSURGERY FOLLOWUPFOLLOWUP 8
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9 Pooled analysis: Time points Rivaroxaban Follow-up Enoxaparin Follow-up Rivaroxaban Enoxaparin Follow-up Rivaroxaban Follow up by: 30–35 days after last dose Day 12 (10–14) Day 1Day 35 (31–39) Enoxaparin Placebo Follow-up Day 12 (10–14) Hip 1 Hip 2 Knee 4 Total study duration pool Day 12±2 active treatment pool Total treatment duration pool Rivaroxaban Enoxaparin Follow-up Knee 3 9 1.Eriksson et al. New Engl J Med 2008; 2.Kakkar et al. Lancet 2008; 3.Lassen et al. New Engl J Med 2008; 4. Turpie et al. Lancet 2009
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10 RECORD1–4* Pooled Analysis: Summary 1.3% 0.6% 0.4% RRR 58% ‡ p<0.001 p=0.076 (NS) Endpoints in total treatment duration pool # 0.2% p-values analysed using a Cox regression model; safety population, n=12,383; *RECORD2 compared extended-duration (35±4 days) rivaroxaban with short-duration (12±2 days) enoxaparin; # 5 weeks in RECORD1 and RECORD2 (includes placebo-controlled period in RECORD2) and 2 weeks in RECORD3 and RECORD4; ‡ Homogeneity test, p=0.313; ¶ Homogeneity test, p=0.431 0 0.5 1.0 1.5 2.0 2.5 Major bleedingSymptomatic VTE and all-cause mortality 0.5% 0.3% 0.2% RRR 52% ¶ p=0.001 p=0.175 (NS) Endpoints in day 12±2 active treatment pool 1.0% Major bleedingSymptomatic VTE and all-cause mortality Enoxaparin regimens Rivaroxaban regimens Incidence (%) 10 Turpie et al. Oral presentation at the XXII Congress of the ISTH. Boston, MA, USA. July 11–16, 2009. Turpie et al. Blood 2008;112(11):Abstract 36.
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11 RECORD1–4*: PE and all-cause mortality # HR = 0.61 (95% CI: 0.39–0.98) p=0.039 0 0.5 1.0 2.0 1.5 Day 1 = day of surgery 47 events 29 events Enoxaparin regimens Rivaroxaban regimens Time-to-event relative to surgery (days) 010203040506070 Cumulative event rate (%) *RECORD2 compared extended-duration (35±4 days) rivaroxaban with short-duration (12±2 days) enoxaparin # Post-hoc analysis; safety population, n=12,383 Turpie et al. Blood (ASH Annual Meeting Abstracts) 2008 11 Total study duration pool
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12 RECORD1–4*: Composite of Death, MI, Stroke, Symptomatic VTE, and Major Bleeding # *RECORD2 compared extended-duration (35±4 days) rivaroxaban with short-duration (12±2 days) enoxaparin # Post-hoc analysis; safety population, n=12,383 HR = 0.69 (95% CI: 0.53–0.89) p=0.004 Total study duration pool Cumulative event rate (%) 010203040506070 0.5 1.0 2.0 1.5 2.5 3.0 Day 1 = day of surgery 139 events 96 events Time-to-event relative to surgery (days) Enoxaparin regimens Rivaroxaban regimens 0 12 Turpie et al. Oral presentation at the XXII Congress of the ISTH. Boston, MA, USA. July 11–16, 2009. Turpie et al. Blood 2008;112(11):Abstract 36.
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VTE prevention in hospitalized medically ill patients http://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT00571649?term=rivaroxaban&rank=9
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MAGELLAN: Study Design Enoxaparin 40 mg once daily for 10 days Patients hospitalized for acute medical illness with decreased level of mobility Rivaroxaban 10 mg once daily for 35 days Day 1 R N = 8000 Follow-up Day 10Day 90 Day 35 End of treatment Oral placebo for 25 days Randomization Primary efficacy endpoint Composite of asymptomatic proximal DVT detected by bilateral ultrasound, symptomatic DVT, non-fatal PE and VTE-related death. Primary safety endpoint Major bleeding and clinically relevant non-major bleeding
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15 VTE – Phases of the Disease and Conventional Treatment with Anticoagulants Phases of the disease Long-term Types and intensity of conventional anticoagulation treatment Initial, parenteral therapeutic dose anticoagulation Early maintenance anticoagulation / Secondary prevention Long-term maintenance anti- coagulation / Secondary prevention UFH, LMWH, Fondaparinux VKA INR 2.0-3.0 VKA INR 2.0-3.0 or 1.5-2.0 At least 5 days At least 3 months > 3 months / years/ indefinite* *With re-assessment of the individual benefit–risk at periodic intervals. Kearon C, et al. Chest. 2008;133;454-545. ESC Textbook of Cardiovascular Medicin 2nd Edition 2009; Chapter 37 Schellong S, Bounameaux H, Büller HR pp 1348-1349 Intermediate Acute
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16 VTE Treatment: Clinical Studies 1 Phase IIPhase III Rivaroxaban Oral direct FXa inhibitor EINSTEIN DVT Rivaroxaban vs LMWH/UFH followed by VKA 1 ODIXa DVT Rivaroxaban vs enoxaparin followed by VKA 2 EINSTEIN DVT/PE 4 Rivaroxaban for 3, 6 or 12 months vs enoxaparin for > 5 days followed by VKA for 3, 6, or 12 months EINSTEIN EXT 4 Pre-treatment with rivaroxaban or VKA for 6 or 12 months followed by rivaroxaban or placebo for 6 or 12 months Dabigatran Oral direct thrombin inhibitor RE-COVER 4 & RE-COVER II 4 5-10 days pre-treatment with LMWH bridging to dabigatran or VKA for 6 months RE-MEDY 4 3-6 months treatment with approved anticoagulant; switch to dabigatran or warfarin RE-SONATE 4 6-18 months VKA treatment followed by 6 months dabigatran or placebo Apixaban Oral direct FXa inhibitor Botticelli-DVT Apixaban vs LMWH or fondaparinux followed by VKA 3 AMPLIFY 4 Apixaban 10 mg bid followed by 5 mg bid for 6 months vs enoxaparin followed by warfarin AMPLIFY-EXT 4 Apixaban 2.5 mg bid or 5 mg bid for extended 12 months period vs placebo 1. Büller HR et al. Blood 2008;112:2242–2247 2. Agnelli GA et al. Circulation 2007;116:180–187 3. Büller HR et al. J Thromb Haem 2008;6:1313–1318 4. www.clinicaltrials.gov
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17 Dabigatran Study Programme Confirmed symptomatic DVT or PE completing 6 to18 months VKA Dabigatran Etexilate 150 mg BID Placebo/warfarin Day 1 R N=1448 RE-SONATE/REMEDY Treatment period of 6 months Symptomatic VTE RE-COVER R N=2,564 Parenteral Anticoagulant Day 1Day 5-10 VKA target INR 2.5 (INR range 2–3) Symptomatic VTE RE-COVER II RE-COVER Pre-defined treatment period of 6 months N=2,554 Dabigatran Etexilate 150 mg BID 17 1. RECOVER Study Information. Trial ID: NCT00291330 Available at http://clinicaltrial.gov/ct2/show/NCT00291330 Accessed 15 November 2009 2. RECOVER Study Information. Trial ID: NCT00680186 Available at http://clinicaltrial.gov/ct2/show/NCT00680186 Accessed 15 November 2009 3. RESONATE Study Information. Trial ID: NCT00558259 Available at http://clinicaltrial.gov/ct2/show/NCT00558259. Accessed 15 November 2009 Parenteral Anticoagulant
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18 EventsDabigatran (n=1274)Warfarin (n=1265) Hazard ratios and confidence intervals Recurrent VTE (%)30 (2.4) 27 (2.2) Risk difference = 0.4% 95% CI; -0.8 to 1.5 p<0.0001 for prespecified non-inferiority Recurrent VTE to the end of follow-up period (%) 34 (2.7)32 (2.5) HR = 1.05 95% CI; 0.065 to 1.70 Major bleeding (%)20 (1.6)24 (1.9) HR = 0.82 95% CI; 0.45 to 1.48 Any bleeding (%)207 (16.2)280 (22.1) HR = 0.71 95% CI; 0.59 to 0.85 RE-COVER: Study Results Source – ASH 2009 Abstract
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19 Rivaroxaban: VTE Treatment Studies Phase IIPhase III Finished ODIXa-DVT EINSTEIN-DVT EINSTEIN EXT Ongoing EINSTEIN DVT EINSTEIN PE http://clinicaltrials.gov 19
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20 Day 1Days 5–7Day 21Day 84Day 114 ODIXa-DVT 1 R Enoxaparin (1 mg/kg) VKA 10 mg bid 20 mg bid 40 mg od 30 mg bid DOUBLE BLIND OPEN LABEL 613 patients randomized INR 2–3 Rivaroxaban CCUS FOLLOW-UP CCUS+ PLS CCUS and PLS EINSTEIN-DVT 2 Rivaroxaban CUS+ PLS R LMWH/heparin VKA 20 mg od 30 mg od 40 mg od CUS and PLS FOLLOW-UP DOUBLE BLIND OPEN LABEL 543 patients randomized INR 2–3 Day 1Days 5–7Day 21Day 84Day 114 Phase II Study Designs: ODIXa-DVT and EINSTEIN-DVT Agnelli et al. Circulation 2007; Büller et al. Blood 2008
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21 Phase II: ODIXa-DVT and EINSTEIN-DVT: Efficacy Outcome 1,2 21 ODIXa-DVT 1 : Rivaroxaban showed similar efficacy to standard therapy Rivaroxaban total daily dose (mg) LMWH/VKA Rate of thrombus regression without recurrent VTE (%) 80 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 6040200 bid rivaroxaban doses od rivaroxaban dose EINSTEIN-DVT 2 : Rivaroxaban showed similar efficacy to standard therapy Rate of deterioration (%) Rivaroxaban total daily dose (mg) LMWH/VKA 103040 20 18 16 14 12 10 8 6 4 2 0 20 Recurrent DVT or PE, VTE-related death, and deterioration in CUS or PLS Agnelli et al (ESC Annual Meeting, Poster presentation) 2006; Buller et al (ESC Annual Meeting, Oral Presentation) 2006: Agnelli et al. Circulation 2007; Büller et al. Blood 2008
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22 EINSTEIN Phase III: Study Designs Confirmed symptomatic DVT or PE completing 6 or 12 months of rivaroxaban or VKA Rivaroxaban 20 mg od Placebo Day 1 R N=1,147 EINSTEIN EXT: Treatment period of 6 or 12 months 30-day observation period 15 mg bid Objectively confirmed DVT without symptomatic PE R N=3,465 Rivaroxaban Day 1Day 21 Enoxaparin 1.0 mg/kg bid for at least 5 days, plus VKA to start <48 hrs, target INR 2.5 (INR range 2–3) Objectively confirmed PE with or without symptomatic DVT EINSTEIN DVT/PE: Pre-defined treatment period of 3, 6, or 12 months 20 mg od N=3,300 30-day observation period Rivaroxaban 22 EINSTEIN DVT, PE, Extension Evaluation Study Information available at: http://clinicaltrials.gov. Accessed 15 November 2009
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23 Primary and Secondary Outcome Measures of EINSTEIN DVT and EINSTEIN PE Evaluation Primary outcome measures 1,2 Symptomatic recurrent VTE, i.e., the composite of (recurrent) DVT or fatal or non-fatal PE Principal safety outcome 1,2 Combination of major and clinically relevant non-major bleeding Secondary outcome measures 1,2 All-cause mortality Vascular events EINSTEIN DVT, PE Evaluation Study Information available at http://clinicaltrials.gov, Accessed 15 November 2009.http://clinicaltrials.gov 23
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Study design Confirmed symptomatic DVT or PE completing 6 or 12 months of rivaroxaban or VKA in EINSTEIN VTE program Rivaroxaban 20 mg od Placebo Day 1 R N=1,197 Treatment period of 6 or 12 months 30-day observational period Confirmed symptomatic DVT or PE completing 6 or 12 months of VKA ~53% ~47% Randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, event-driven (n=30), superiority study EINSTEIN Extension Trial ID: NCT00439725
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25 EINSTEIN Extension: Study Results EventsRivaroxaban (n=594)Placebo (n=602) Recurrent VTE (%)*8 (1.3) 42 (7.1) HR = 0.184 RRR = 82% P < 0.0001 Major bleeding (%)4 (0.7)0)P = 0.11 *Some patients experienced more than one event
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Major outcomes Primary efficacy outcome* Symptomatic recurrent VTE, i.e. composite of recurrent DVT, non- fatal PE, or fatal PE, or unexplained death where PE cannot be excluded Principal safety outcome* Major bleeding, defined as overt bleeding associated with: A fall in hemoglobin of 2 g/dL or more, or A transfusion of 2 or more units of packed red blood cells or whole blood, or Occurrence at a critical site: intracranial, intraspinal, intraocular, pericardial, intra-articular, intramuscular with compartment syndrome, retroperitoneal, or Death *Adjudicated by the Central Independent Adjudication Committee
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Patient flow Mean duration of therapy Before study entry: placebo 249 days; rivaroxaban 248 days During study: placebo 190 days; rivaroxaban 190 days Last patient enrolled Treated for at least 3 months Safety population ITT population for primary efficacy Placebo 595 594 590 602 598 Rivaroxaban Randomized (n=1,197)
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Patient characteristics ITT population; *index event not confirmed in all patients Placebo (n=594) Rivaroxaban (n=602) Males (%) 5759 Age, mean (years) 58 Body mass index, mean (kg/m 2 ) 28 Creatinine clearance (mL/min) <5049(8%)37(6%) 50–<80121(20%)134(22%) ≥80373(63%)371(62%) Index event* DVT350(59%)376(63%) PE with or without DVT233(39%)213(35%) Risk factors Patients with idiopathic DVT/PE358(60%)344(57%) Patients with risk factors236(40%)258(43%)
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Primary efficacy outcome and individual components Placebo (n=594) Rivaroxaban (n=602) Symptomatic recurrent VTE*427.1%81.3% Recurrent DVT315.2%50.8% Non-fatal PE132.2%20.3% Fatal PE10.2%0 Unexplained death (where PE cannot be excluded) 010.2% ITT population; *some patients experienced more than one event
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Number of subjects at risk Rivaroxaban6025905835735525034821711381321149281 Placebo5945825705545214674441641381331109385 ITT population Primary efficacy outcome analysis (time to first event) 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 Cumulative event rate (%) 0306090120150180210240270300330360 Time to event (days) Rivaroxaban (n=602) Placebo (n=594) HR=0.184; p<0.0001 RRR=82% Number needed to treat to prevent 1 primary efficacy outcome: 15
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Placebo (n=590) Rivaroxaban (n=598) Major bleeding 0 4 (0.7%)* Bleeding contributing to death00 Bleeding in a critical site00 Associated with fall in hemoglobin 2 g/dL and/or transfusion Gastrointestinal bleeding03 (0.5%) Menorrhagia01 (0.2%) Principal safety outcome: major bleeding Number needed to harm: approximately 139 *p=0.11 Safety population
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Placebo (n=590) Rivaroxaban (n=598) Clinically relevant non-major bleeding7 (1.2%)32 (5.4%)* Urogenital/uterus2 (0.3%)12 (2.0%) Nasal1 (0.2%)8 (1.3%) Rectal/anal2 (0.3%)6 (1.0%) Skin2 (0.3%)4 (0.7%) Ear01 (0.2%) Gastrointestinal01 (0.2%) Surgical site01 (0.2%) Other outcomes Safety population; some patients experienced more than one event *p<0.01
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Placebo (n=594) Rivaroxaban (n=602) Cardiovascular outcomes 4 (0.7%) STEMI 01 (0.2%) Unstable angina 1 (0.2%)3 (0.5%) Transient ischemic attack 1 (0.2%)0 Ischemic stroke 1 (0.2%)0 Non-CNS systemic embolism 1 (0.2%)0 ITT population Other outcomes Total mortality2 (0.3%)1 (0.2%) PE1 (0.2%) Cancer1 (0.2%) Unexplained death including where PE cannot be excluded 01 (0.2%)
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ALT >3 x ULN (single measurement) Continued Improved n=1n=6 ALT >3 x ULN (3 measurements) Continued Improved n=1 Allopurinol/statins/ multiple drugs n=1 Hepatic steatosis, 8-year history of ALT ALT >3 x ULN (single measurement) Discontinued Improved n=1 Unexplained n=3 1 liver hemangioma/ hepatic steatosis 2 unexplained ALT >8 x ULN (2 measurements) Discontinued Improved 0n=1 Alcohol abuse/ allopurinol/ hepatitis A Asymptomatic ALT rises, study treatment, clinical history, and concomitant medication Observation/ frequency Treatment/ outcome PlaceboRivaroxaban Liver failure/ death00 ALT >3x ULN + bilirubin >2x ULN 00 Safety population
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35 Summary VTE is a serious and potentially life-threatening condition Current standard of treatment usually requires initial parenteral LMWH/UFH or fondaparinux followed by an oral VKA For many patients with VTE, secondary prevention with VKA is not extended beyond 6 months since risk of VTE may be outweighed by risk of major bleeding 1 Patients with VTE have a major risk of recurrent VTE that may persist for years 2,3 New oral anticoagulants may have the potential to improve benefit- risk and simplify acute VTE treatment and secondary prevention 35 1. Schulman S: N Engl J Med 2003 Oct 30; 349(18):1713-21 2. Prandoni P, Lensing AWA, Cogo A, et al. Ann Intern Med 1996; 125: 1–7. 3. Heit JA, Mohr DN, Silverstein MD, et al. Arch Intern Med 2000; 160: 761–768.
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