Fixed-dose dabigatran as safe, effective as warfarin for VTE
Click Here to Manage Email Alerts
51st ASH Annual Meeting
A fixed-dose of dabigatran, a new oral thrombin inhibitor, for the treatment of patients with acute venous thromboembolism had similar safety and efficacy to warfarin.
We are excited by these findings and feel that they will change the standard of care for venous thromboembolism, which affects a large number of our patients, Sam Schulman, MD, professor of medicine at McMaster Clinic and Hamilton General Hospital in Ontario, Canada, said in a press release.
This [studys findings demonstrated] that dabigatran is a safe and effective anticoagulant that does not require the routine monitoring or dose adjustments that are necessary with warfarin. In other words, patients can receive the same results in a more convenient manner, he said.
Schulman presented the findings of the trial, which were published simultaneously in The New England Journal of Medicine, during a press conference at the 51st ASH Annual Meeting.
Researchers randomly assigned 1,274 patients to a fixed dose of dabigatran 150 mg twice daily and 1,265 patients to warfarin once daily in doses adjusted to an International Normalized Ratio of 2.0 to 3.0. International Normalized Ratio was performed an average of every 11 days, according to researchers.
After six months of treatment, 2.4% of patients assigned to dabigatran and 2.1% of patients assigned to warfarin experienced recurrent VTE. Safety was comparable between the two drugs. Two hundred and five patients in the dabigatran group had bleeding, including 20 patients with major bleeding, and 277 patients in the warfarin group had bleeding, including 24 patients with major bleeding.
Adverse effects included death, acute coronary syndromes and abnormalities in liver function tests; however, they were infrequent in both treatment groups.
We will continue conducting three more ongoing studies: one is a parallel study with essentially the same design but with a higher proportion of the Asian population to demonstrate efficacy in other ethnicities, and two studies will assess extended treatment. We will have the results of these studies within the next year or two, Schulman said during the press conference. - by Christen Haigh
For more information:
- Schulman S. #1. Presented at: 51st ASH Annual Meeting and Exposition, Dec. 4-8, 2009, New Orleans.
A number of new oral anticoagulants are in development. Two of them, rivaroxaban and dabigatran, are approved in a number of countries, but not the United States, for venous thromboembolism prevention after knee and hip replacement surgery. The large 2,539-patient phase-3 trial on Dabigatran in the Treatment of Venous Thromboembolism presented in the plenary session showed that the antithrombin drug dabigatran, given twice daily in a fixed dose and without anticoagulant blood monitoring, was equally effective and safe in preventing venous thromboembolism recurrence as warfarin. Liver function abnormalities were infrequent and occurred with similar frequency in both treatment groups.
This study is noteworthy, as it is the first one of the new oral anticoagulant venous thromboembolism treatment trials that is completed and provides data on how well one of the new oral anticoagulants performs in the treatment of venous thromboembolism. It is a significant step forward on our path to get a warfarin alternative into clinical practice and make anticoagulant therapy easier for patients who suffer a venous thromboembolism.
- Stephan Moll, MD
Associate Professor,
Division of Hematology-Oncology, UNC School of Medicine, Chapel Hill