Evaluating the Data: What Recent Clinical Trials Can Teach Us About Preventing Atrial Fibrillation-Related Stroke CME

Size: px
Start display at page:

Download "Evaluating the Data: What Recent Clinical Trials Can Teach Us About Preventing Atrial Fibrillation-Related Stroke CME"

Transcription

1 Evaluating the Data: What Recent Clinical Trials Can Teach Us About Preventing Atrial Fibrillation-Related Stroke CME Bruce D. Lindsay, MD Keith A. A. Fox, MB, ChB John H. Alexander, MD, MHS Gregory Y. H. Lip, MD The Cleveland Clinic Foundation Center for Continuing Education acknowledges an educational grant for support of this activity from: Bristol-Myers Squibb and Pfizer, Inc. View this activity online at: medscape.org/spotlight/anticoagulants or theheart.org/spotlight/anticoagulants

2 Evaluating the Data: What Recent Clinical Trials Can Teach Us About Preventing Atrial Fibrillation-Related Stroke CME This transcript is being provided for your reference. To participate in the CME activity visit: medscape.org/spotlight/anticoagulants or theheart.org/spotlight/anticoagulants CME released: 09/23/201 Valid for credit through: 09/22/2012 Target Audience This program is intended for cardiologists, primary care physicians, internists, neurologists, and allied healthcare professionals who manage patients with atrial fibrillation (AF). Goal The goal of this activity is to educate clinicians on the clinical trial results for currently available anticoagulant agents and those in development for stroke prevention for patients with AF. Learning Objectives Upon completion of this activity, participants will be able to: 1. Review recent clinical trial data of oral anticoagulants for the prevention of stroke and systemic embolism 2. Evaluate the potential of the novel oral anticoagulants to manage and reduce stroke 3. Implement changes in approach based on recent American Heart Association/American Stroke Association stroke prevention guidelines Credits Available Accreditation Statements The Cleveland Clinic Foundation Center for Continuing Education is accredited by the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education to provide continuing medical education for physicians. The Cleveland Clinic Foundation Center for Continuing Education designates this enduring material for a maximum of 0.5 AMA PRA Category 1 Credits. Physicians should claim only the credit commensurate with the extent of their participation in the activity Instructions for Participation and Credit To participate in this internet activity: (1) review the target audience, learning objectives, and author disclosures; (2) study all of the educational content online; (3) take the post-test and/or complete the evaluation; (4) view/print certificate. To receive AMA PRA Category 1 Credit, you must receive a minimum score of 70% on the post-test. Estimated time of completion: 30 minutes Authors and Disclosures Author(s) Bruce D. Lindsay, MD Section Head Clinical Cardiac Electrophysiology Cleveland Clinic Foundation Cardiovascular Medicine Cleveland, Ohio Bruce D. Lindsay, MD, has disclosed no relevant financial relationships. Keith A. A. Fox, MB, ChB Professor of Cardiology Centre for Cardiovascular Science University of Edinburgh Edinburgh, United Kingdom Keith A. A. Fox, MB, ChB, has disclosed the following relevant financial relationships: Pg.2

3 medscape.org/spotlight/ anticoagulants or theheart.org/spotlight/anticoagulants Served as a consultant and independent contractor for: Bayer HealthCare Pharmaceuticals; Johnson & Johnson Pharmaceutical Research & Development, L.L.C. John H. Alexander, MD, MHS Associate Professor of Medicine Division of Cardiovascular Medicine Duke University Medical Center Duke Clinical Research Institute Durham, North Carolina John H. Alexander, MD, MHS, has disclosed the following relevant financial relationships: Served as a consultant and member of advisory committee or review panel for: Bristol-Myers Squibb Company; Ortho-McNeil-Jannsen Pharmaceuticals; Pfizer Inc. Gregory Y. H. Lip, MD Consultant Cardiologist Professor of Cardiovascular Medicine University of Birmingham Centre for Cardiovascular Sciences City Hospital Birmingham, United Kingdom Gregory Y. H. Lip, MD, has disclosed the following relevant financial relationships: Served as an advisor or consultant for: Boehringer Ingelheim Pharmaceuticals, Inc.; sanofi-aventis; Bayer HealthCare Pharmaceuticals; Merck & Co., Inc.; Astellas Pharma, Inc.; Portola Pharmaceuticals, Inc.; BIOTRONIK, Inc.; AstraZeneca Pharmaceuticals LP; Bristol- Myers Squibb Company; Pfizer Inc Served as a speaker or a member of a speakers bureau for: Boehringer Ingelheim Pharmaceuticals, Inc.; sanofi-aventis; Bayer HealthCare Pharmaceuticals; Bristol-Myers Squibb Company; Pfizer Inc. Activity Director and Reviewer Katherine J. Hoercher, RN Senior Director of Special Programs Kaufman Center for Heart Failure Heart and Vascular Institute Cleveland Clinic Cleveland, Ohio Katherine J. Hoercher, RN, has disclosed no relevant financial relationships. Editor(s) Javier F. Negrón, PhD Scientific Director, Medscape, LLC Javier F. Negrón, PhD, has disclosed no relevant financial relationships. Content Reviewer: Nafeez Zawahir, MD CME Clinical Director, Medscape, LLC Nafeez Zawahir, MD, has disclosed no relevant financial relationships. All other planners, CME staff, and content reviewers, have no relevant financial relationships to disclose. Disclaimer The information in this educational activity is provided for general medical education purposes only and is not meant to substitute for the independent medical judgment of a physician relative to diagnostic and treatment options for a specific patient s medical condition. The viewpoints expressed in this CME activity are those of the authors/faculty. They do not represent an endorsement by The Cleveland Clinic Foundation. In no event will The Cleveland Clinic Foundation be liable for any decision made or action taken in reliance upon the information provided through this CME activity. In accordance with the Standards for Commercial Support issued by the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education (ACCME), The Cleveland Clinic Foundation Center for Continuing Education requires resolution of all faculty conflicts of interest to ensure CME activities are free of commercial bias. The material presented here does not necessarily reflect the views of Medscape, LLC, or companies that support educational programming on These materials may discuss therapeutic products that have not been approved by the US Food and Drug Administration and off-label uses of approved products. A qualified healthcare professional should be consulted before using any therapeutic product discussed. Readers should verify all information and data before treating patients or employing any therapies described in this educational activity. Pg.3

4 Evaluating the Data: What Recent Clinical Trials Can Teach Us About Preventing Atrial Fibrillation-Related Stroke CME Evaluating the Data: What Recent Clinical Trials Can Teach Us About Preventing Atrial Fibrillation-Related Stroke CME Introduction: Stroke is a significant concern for patients with atrial fibrillation, contributing to morbidity, mortality, and overall disease burden. Despite its proven benefits, anticoagulant therapy for stroke prevention in patients with atrial fibrillation is widely underutilized and inappropriately applied. Identifying patients at risk for stroke and prescribing anticoagulant therapy according to risk level are areas for improvement in the management of atrial fibrillation. Limitations of traditional therapies have led to exploration of alternative oral anticoagulants for stroke prevention in atrial fibrillation. Emerging data support the use of new oral anticoagulants -- that exhibit linear kinetics and do not require routine international normalized ratio monitoring -- for stroke prevention in atrial fibrillation. Join Drs. Lindsay, Lip, Fox, and Alexander as they discuss recent anticoagulant trials in the prevention of atrial fibrillation-related stroke. Bruce D. Lindsay, MD: Hello. My name is Bruce Lindsay, and I head the section in electrophysiology and pacing at the Cleveland Clinic. We re joined today as a panel to evaluate the data of recent clinical trials and what they can teach us about atrial fibrillation-related stroke. Pg.4

5 medscape.org/spotlight/ anticoagulants or theheart.org/spotlight/anticoagulants I m joined today by my colleagues, Dr. Gregory Lip, he is from the University of Birmingham; Dr. Keith Fox, University of Edinburgh; and Dr. John Alexander from Duke. To put all of this in perspective, stroke is the most common and devastating complication of atrial fibrillation, and the all-cause stroke rate in patients with atrial fibrillation is about 5% per year. Atrial fibrillation is an independent risk factor for stroke, and there is about a 5-fold increased risk for stroke in patients who have atrial fibrillation. It probably accounts for about 15% of all strokes, and it increases with age, which is a problem in our societies because we have an aging population. That risk persists even in asymptomatic patients. Now, the biggest problem, as shown in the figure, that we have here is that the therapeutic window for warfarin is extremely narrow. As we all know, we have to keep the international normalized ratio (INR) between 2 and 3, but if it s subtherapeutic the risk for stroke increases, and if it s supratherapeutic the risk for bleeding complication increases. Pg.5

6 Evaluating the Data: What Recent Clinical Trials Can Teach Us About Preventing Atrial Fibrillation-Related Stroke CME Now, we are here today among other things to talk about some of the alternatives to warfarin and some of the new trials that have been done. The alternatives include apixaban, rivaroxaban, and dabigatran. Apixaban and rivaroxaban target factor Xa, and dabigatran is a direct thrombin inhibitor. Apixaban and dabigatran are both administered twice a day. One of the potential advantages of rivaroxaban is it can be administered just once a day, and the half-life of these agents is in the range of 9-17 hours. Rivaroxaban is probably a little bit shorter in half-life, somewhere in the range of 5-9 hours, though a bit longer in the elderly. Renal metabolism is about 33% for apixaban and 25% for rivaroxaban but 80% for dabigatran. For patients who have renal failure, dabigatran requires some special consideration. In contrast, hepatic metabolism is higher for the other 2 agents, about 67% for apixaban and 75% for rivaroxaban. There have been several interesting trials that we re going to talk about today, and they include AVERROES, which was a study of apixaban compared with aspirin. ARISTOTLE, which is breaking today, is apixaban vs warfarin. Dr. Alexander will be talking about that. ROCKET AF, which was rivaroxaban compared with warfarin, Dr. Fox will be talking about that; and RE-LY, which was dabigatran and warfarin, Dr. Lip will be discussing that. Pg.6

7 medscape.org/spotlight/ anticoagulants or theheart.org/spotlight/anticoagulants In aggregate, these trials include more than 56,000 patients, and the reason for that is warfarin has been pretty effective over the years so it takes a lot of patients to show these differences. In ROCKET AF, more than 80% of the patients had a CHADS2 score greater than 3, and the other trials were down in the 30% range. Participants median age was around 70 or so, but what is also interesting in these trials is no matter how carefully we try to regulate the INR, the time in therapeutic range (TTR) was about 55%-68%. That speaks to the difficulty in regulating warfarin. At this point, I d like to turn to Dr. Lip, and he ll discuss some of the trials including RE-LY and AVERROES. Dr. Lip? Gregory Y. H. Lip, MD: Thank you. The first clinical trial of these new anticoagulants to be published and presented was the RE-LY trial, and RE-LY when it was first presented essentially changed the landscape of how we approach stroke prevention in atrial fibrillation. This is a trial comparing the oral direct thrombin inhibitor dabigatran vs warfarin, and this was done in a PROBE design, a prospective, randomized, open, blinded-endpoint evaluation. Patients were randomly assigned to warfarin or dabigatran so they knew they were either taking warfarin or dabigatran, but both doses of dabigatran were given in a blinded manner. We can see from the Kaplan-Meier curves that dabigatran 110 mg twice a day was noninferior to warfarin for the primary endpoint of stroke and systemic embolism. However, for the 150-mg, twice-daily dose of dabigatran it showed superiority compared with warfarin with 35% less stroke and systemic embolism compared with warfarin. This was a very important result, certainly when it was first published and presented 2 years ago. This was the first time that we had seen one of the new anticoagulants showing superiority to warfarin. It was long considered that warfarin was hard to beat in terms of preventing strokes in atrial fibrillation. Pg.7

8 Evaluating the Data: What Recent Clinical Trials Can Teach Us About Preventing Atrial Fibrillation-Related Stroke CME Turning to the safety aspects from the RE-LY trial, these are summarized on this slide. If you look at bleeding -- and first it concentrated particularly on major bleeding because that is a particularly hard endpoint -- if you compare dabigatran 110 mg vs warfarin there was 20% fewer major bleeds, which was significant. From the efficacy aspect, 110 mg twice a day was noninferior to warfarin and was therefore associated with 20% fewer major bleeds. In terms of the 150-mg dose, there was no significant difference to warfarin in terms of major bleeds. Therefore with the 150-mg dabigatran dose there was superior efficacy in preventing stroke and systemic embolism and no significant difference in the major bleed rate. Both doses of dabigatran had significantly fewer life-threatening major bleeds compared with warfarin. Another important result on the safety aspect is that both doses of dabigatran also showed significantly fewer intracranial hemorrhages compared with warfarin, and of course intracranial hemorrhage is the most feared complication related to warfarin therapy. Here we see with the oral direct thrombin inhibitors significantly fewer intracranial hemorrhages at both doses compared with warfarin. In terms of gastrointestinal major bleed, there was a slight excess in the 150-mg arm of the trial, which was statistically significant. One result that did cause a bit of discussion was the rate of myocardial infarction because this was numerically increased in both doses of dabigatran compared with warfarin. This was not statistically significant, but still there was a numerical but nonstatistically significant increase in myocardial infarction events in dabigatran-treated patients compared with warfarin. Much has been debated about whether this is largely a protective effective of warfarin or whether this was a bad effect of dabigatran, but it is more likely considered to be a protective effect of warfarin. Dr. Lindsay: Why do you think warfarin might be protective if this is really a statistically significant trend at least? Why would warfarin be more protective, do you think, than dabigatran? Dr. Lip: Various mechanistic hypotheses have been put forward, and it is perhaps related to multiple coagulation pathways being affected by warfarin compared with dabigatran, which only targets thrombin. You also see this pattern in some of the other studies comparing warfarin with a new anticoagulant or a warfarin comparator. Certainly this was seen in the SPORTIF III trial, which compared warfarin vs the older direct thrombin inhibitor ximelagatran. There were numerically fewer myocardial infarctions in the warfarin-treated patients compared with ximelagatran. This was also seen in the AMADEUS trial comparing warfarin with the indirect factor Xa inhibitor idraparinux. Quite interestingly in the ACTIVE trial where warfarin was compared with aspirin/clopidogrel combination therapy, there was also numerically fewer myocardial infarction events in the warfarin-treated patients compared with aspirin/clopidogrel. Dr. Lindsay: That s interesting. I don t think we talk about that much, but it seems to be a fairly consistent trend. Keith A. A. Fox, MB, ChB: There s another trial with dabigatran more recently that has suggested at least a trend for increased myocardial infarction with dabigatran. Dr. Lip: Indeed this is one of the venous thromboembolism trials. Dr. Fox: A venous thromboembolism trial with long-term follow-up, yes indeed. Dr. Lindsay: Thank you for clarifying that. Pg.8

9 medscape.org/spotlight/ anticoagulants or theheart.org/spotlight/anticoagulants Dr. Lip: Moving on now in terms of the trials in the order they were published or presented certainly in terms of publication, the next trial I will cover is the AVERROES trial. AVERROES is a trial where patients had either refused warfarin or were deemed to have failed warfarin in a sense of having difficulty maintaining warfarin monitoring or keeping it in the target INR range, either from the patient perspective or from the physician perspective that the patient was not suitable for warfarin. In our everyday clinical practice, the physician would reach for aspirin to treat these patients. In AVERROES, therefore, this was a comparison of the oral factor Xa inhibitor, apixaban, an anticoagulant, vs aspirin, and this trial was stopped early due to very clear superiority of apixaban over aspirin in terms of preventing stroke and systemic embolism, which was their primary endpoint. As can be seen from these Kaplan-Meier plots, it was a 55% reduction in the primary endpoint of stroke and systemic embolism. Dr. Lindsay: That was quite a striking finding when it came out, and it certainly raises questions about some of these other drugs that are coming along the line. Well, we finish our evaluation of AVERROES and then move on to -- Dr. Fox: What if we just ask what kind of effect would you have expected for warfarin against aspirin? Dr. Lip: Well, this is what we would expect in a sense that even if you look at the older trials or even one of the more contemporary trials, the BAFTA trial where elderly patients were randomly assigned to warfarin or aspirin, we clearly saw again over 50% reduction in stroke. Dr. Fox: A strong effect, yes. John H. Alexander, MD, MHS: Greg, when I m treating these patients, I usually reach for aspirin, but at 325 mg a day. In AVERROES there was a wide range of dosing options with I believe a majority of people getting on the lower end of aspirin doses. Dr. Lip: That is correct. The treating trialist could choose anything between 81 and 324 mg. In terms of looking at the different doses of aspirin regimens, the P value of interaction was not significant. In any case, the data for aspirin are not terribly strong either, and as you say if you reach for 325 mg, it is on the basis of one trial, the SPAF1 trial, which has major problems. Dr. Alexander: Yeah. Dr. Lindsay: Maybe you could comment on the compliance with taking the drug and how often people were able to stay on it during the trial. Pg.9

10 Evaluating the Data: What Recent Clinical Trials Can Teach Us About Preventing Atrial Fibrillation-Related Stroke CME Dr. Lip: Indeed in the AVERROES trial there are 2 other aspects. You have raised one of them, but I started by also saying in terms of the safety aspect, one of the important observations in the AVERROES trial was when you look at major bleeding there was no significant difference between apixaban, an anticoagulant, vs aspirin. The rate of intracranial hemorrhage with apixaban was also not significantly different from that seen with the aspirin-treated patients, and that in a sense was consistent with what we saw in the BAFTA trial as well. In the elderly patients treated with warfarin or aspirin, the rate of major hemorrhage was not significantly different in BAFTA between warfarin and aspirin-treated patients, nor was the intracranial hemorrhage rate. The other aspect of AVERROES is tolerability. If you look at tolerability in terms of permanent discontinuations, apixaban, the anticoagulant, was actually better tolerated than aspirin because the rates of permanent discontinuations, 17.9% per year with apixaban and 20.5% per year with aspirin, this translates to 12% fewer discontinuations with apixaban compared with aspirin. Dr. Lindsay: That s an important point because if we look ahead with these drugs, if somebody is on warfarin you can at least measure and get some assessment of whether they are taking the warfarin. With all of the other drugs we will be discussing today, to the best of my knowledge so far there is no way of measuring their effect for clinical regulation, and so we have to rely on what the patients are telling us as to whether they can take it. Dr. Lip: Well, not yet, but there are anti-xa assays that are available. Dr. Lindsay: They are working on it. Dr. Lip: They re actually available in some countries. Dr. Alexander: They re not widely available because there are no Xa agents widely available being used in chronic therapy now. I expect we ll see them. Dr. Fox: But in some countries, they ve standardized across the country so there is the same anti-xa assay across the country. Dr. Lindsay: We haven t seen that in the United States yet, but that will probably be coming. Then I think that will be key because if you re going to cardiovert somebody, it does raise the question of what do you do if you don t have a measure to determine whether they have been taking it? Dr. Lip: One important point to perhaps emphasize is that you may not be able to have assays that do the same like an INR that we do for warfarin in terms of trying to use that as a measure of how intense an anticoagulant is and to use that to dose adjust. Nonetheless, even relatively simple assays such as the activated partial thromboplastin time, for example, can be used to measure an anticoagulant effect in a patient taking dabigatran. Dr. Lindsay: Are there any other key points that you would like to make, Dr. Lip? If not, I d like to move ahead to discussing the ROCKET AF trial. Dr. Fox? Pg.10

11 medscape.org/spotlight/ anticoagulants or theheart.org/spotlight/anticoagulants Dr. Fox: Thanks, Bruce. The ROCKET AF trial was a double-blind, double-dummied design in 14,200 patients, and the aim was to achieve noninferiority compared with warfarin. In the curve that we re seeing here, you can see that the hazard ratio is 0.79 in favor of rivaroxaban showing that while patients were on treatment -- because the first analysis was the on-treatment analysis -- that it indeed achieved its aim of noninferiority. When we looked at the whole intent-to-treat (ITT) population that included both the time on treatment and the time after treatment, and that in total was another 117 days, then not surprisingly the curves were close together, and it did not achieve superiority in the ITT population. It may be worthwhile to look at the time on treatment shown in the left-hand panel, which is while they re receiving the blinded treatment vs events that occur after early discontinuation, and it s not surprising that the 2 curves are almost superimposed. On the right-hand side, they are very small numbers later on so they aren t really different. Pg.11

12 Evaluating the Data: What Recent Clinical Trials Can Teach Us About Preventing Atrial Fibrillation-Related Stroke CME When we look at the treatment effect by category, you can see that in the per-protocol population there is clearly evidence that it meets noninferiority, again very similar results if you look at the whole safety population and also achieves superiority while on treatment. The ITT population achieved the aim of noninferiority, and up to the end of treatment it was superior. There were some differences in design across the trials, and that s why I think it s helpful to discuss it. Maybe we were very cautious about how we analyzed and presented ROCKET because it included both the on-treatment time and the post-treatment time. Dr. Lindsay: I d like to come back to some of the comments about trial design maybe after we ve had a chance to review all of the studies because that always becomes a factor in trying to interpret these data. But go ahead and make your other points. Dr. Fox: There are a whole number of things that we have to look at in each of the trials, and you already commented, for example, about the center time and therapeutic range, and that is an important issue. Dr. Lindsay: A very practical issue. Dr. Fox: A very practical issue, but it wasn t measured in the same way in the different trials. In ROCKET there were no blanking periods say in the first 7 days or when people stopped therapy, so the result that you get is not necessarily going to be the same across the trials where the other trials adopted a blanking period. I think we need a straight playing field where we can look at, analyze, and understand the data, and I think that is going to help us. Pg.12

13 medscape.org/spotlight/ anticoagulants or theheart.org/spotlight/anticoagulants Here we show very clearly one of the things that s happened, which is that at the end of the trial, during the transition when the patients came to the end of the trial, if they were on warfarin actually they remained almost horizontal rather than dipping down. In the rivaroxaban arm, you can see we were very cautious about transitioning them to warfarin, and that resulted in a small number of events, excessive events, in the rivaroxaban arm. Dr. Lindsay: It does raise the point that as the patients are being transitioned from these drugs, probably most of the time from warfarin to whatever these new agents are, but sometimes in the reverse, there will be a body of experience that we will have to build up in how to do that safely. Dr. Fox: Absolutely, and that s why we present here the on-treatment effects, a different number of events in the rivaroxaban arms vs the warfarin arms in favor of rivaroxaban, and off-treatment there was a small excess. I think we were too cautious about that transition. Dr. Lindsay: We have an exciting trial that got presented today. Let s go ahead and run through that. Dr. Alexander will run through that with us. Pg.13

14 Evaluating the Data: What Recent Clinical Trials Can Teach Us About Preventing Atrial Fibrillation-Related Stroke CME Dr. Alexander: Thanks, Bruce. I m really thrilled to be able to share and discuss with you guys the ARISTOTLE data. These results were just presented this morning by my colleague, Chris Granger, and I had the opportunity to participate in the steering committee of ARISTOTLE. Like all of these other trials, and actually most similar to the ROCKET AF trial, ARISTOTLE was a large, 18,000-patient, blinded trial in patients with atrial fibrillation and at least 1 additional risk factor for stroke. It s a similar population to RE-LY. Patients were randomized to either apixaban 5 mg twice a day, a factor X inhibitor, or warfarin that was adjusted by blinded INR like in the ROCKET AF trial. The primary endpoint was stroke, both ischemic and hemorrhagic stroke, or systemic embolism. The main results of the trial were that on all-cause stroke or systemic embolism, apixaban resulted in a 21% reduction relative to warfarin that was statistically significant for superiority. Like the rivaroxaban program, ARISTOTLE was designed as a noninferiority trial. Actually, all of these programs were designed before RE-LY was published, and nobody expected any trial, any drug to beat warfarin. Dr. Lindsay: I think it speaks to how well warfarin has worked over the years. It has done pretty well. Pg.14

15 medscape.org/spotlight/ anticoagulants or theheart.org/spotlight/anticoagulants Dr. Alexander: Absolutely, and so this effect on all-cause stroke was driven mostly by a reduction in hemorrhagic stroke. There s a large reduction, about a 50% reduction in hemorrhagic stroke with apixaban compared with warfarin. On ischemic stroke and uncertain stroke, because there s a small number of strokes in which you aren t able to define whether they are hemorrhagic or ischemic, there was essentially no difference with apixaban compared with warfarin. So apixaban is equally effective to warfarin at preventing ischemic stroke and much safer, and I think that is something we want to come back to because it s something that I see as a common theme among all of these drugs. We did look at myocardial infarction, and there was no increase in myocardial infarction. There was a trend toward a lower rate of myocardial infarction differentiating it from the thrombin-inhibitor trials. And then this reduction in stroke coupled with the lower rate of major bleeding that we saw in the trial overall resulted in a borderline statistically,.047, reduction in all-cause mortality. The different trials, I think, just waffle around the P value of.05. ARISTOTLE ended up just on the right side of it, but all of these trials that are reducing stroke and reducing bleeding are benefitting our patients. Pg.15

16 Evaluating the Data: What Recent Clinical Trials Can Teach Us About Preventing Atrial Fibrillation-Related Stroke CME In total, the ARISTOTLE trial demonstrated a 21% reduction in stroke or systemic embolism, a 31% reduction in major bleeding, and an 11% reduction in all-cause mortality. For those of us who have trouble remembering data and numbers, this is really convenient because it s 11, 21, and 31. As I said, Chris Granger presented these data just this morning. They are hot off the press, and we re really excited about them. Dr. Lindsay: I think as we put all of this together and look at these trials, it s a very consistent theme. Certainly these drugs are not inferior to warfarin. There is some evidence that they have some benefits to warfarin. I think the question is, as they become more readily available, how are we going to use them? There have been throughout these trials exclusion criteria that do separate out some of the patients we re currently treating with warfarin. So they didn t include patients with mechanical valves. We ll have to learn how to use them appropriately in people who have renal failure, and they re not included in dialysis patients right now. I guess on a practical standpoint, one of the things we struggle with in the United States is that these drugs are expensive. If you look at a cost-effectiveness analysis, dabigatran looks pretty good with that, but it depends in the United States at least on how your insurance is because the total cost might be better but if you re the one that s paying that cost, then it may not be better for you as an individual. How does that compare in England, for example? Pg.16

17 medscape.org/spotlight/ anticoagulants or theheart.org/spotlight/anticoagulants Dr. Fox: The cost issue is important, and I think it is also important that the cost of the drugs is coming out of one pocket but the cost of having a stroke and long-term care is coming out of another pocket. Dr. Lindsay: INR monitoring is often coming out of a third pocket. Dr. Alexander: When you compare budgets, you have to bring them all together. Dr. Fox: These are hard things to balance, but you ve raised the issue of renal dysfunction. I presented this morning the results of the big cohort, prospective cohort in ROCKET AF with renal dysfunction, those with moderate renal dysfunction, so it s above 30 ml/minute in creatinine clearance. We reduce the dose of rivaroxaban to 15 mg for that, and the bottom line result is it s consistent with the overall trial. That s the bottom line result. It s very interesting. There s a lot of consistency of several things between the apixaban trial and the ROCKET trial in terms of the hazard ratios are identical and so on, identical. You had a more powered trial, a bigger trial. Dr. Alexander: We have some number, 50 more events or so, and that P value crosses the bound of statistical significance. Dr. Fox: One difference that is in favor of apixaban is actually the bleeding. Both of us showed decreased fatal bleeds and intracerebral bleeds. Dr. Alexander: Yes. Dr. Fox: But overall the reduction in bleeding is a very interesting and I think potentially important result in the ARISTOTLE trial. Dr. Lindsay: Let me ask you this, and maybe we can go around the table on this. Let s assume that these drugs were all approved, which is not quite the case, at least for us in the United States. The question is how you decide which patients you would put on these. For example, as I see patients, if they are doing well on warfarin and their INRs have been easy to regulate, I typically just leave them on warfarin unless they feel strongly about it in different ways. Sometimes patients will say to me even if that has been easy to manage that they don t like having to modify their diet or they re always concerned about some drug interaction. All of these are well-known problems with warfarin that don t seem to be an issue with these newer drugs. Dr. Fox: So, Bruce, this patient comes into your office and says, well, Dr. Lindsay, thank you for telling me that I m doing really well and I m well-controlled on warfarin. But I ve been looking at the Internet, and I see that this same cohort have gone into various other trials with reduced rates of intracerebral bleeding. Is this important, doctor? Dr. Lindsay: It s an interesting point because these are statistical differences, but what I ve generally told patients is that there are differences in populations here, but when you apply it to an individual, those risks are pretty small. So I look at it as being comparable. Dr. Alexander: The stroke risks in the trials are 2% a year or less, right, so 98% of patients do okay. Dr. Lindsay: They re doing okay. Dr. Alexander: But you don t know which are the 2%. Dr. Lindsay: Well, of course you don t. But if cost is an issue for them, and it is at least right now for most of them, that can be a big burden for an uncertain gain. For me it has to do more with how they are managing on warfarin, whether it has been difficult to regulate or whether they have a strong preference from whatever they ve heard. How do you handle that, Greg? Dr. Lip: Cost is clearly an issue, and as has been discussed, there is a tendency to directly compare the costs of a new drug vs the cost of warfarin, which doesn t cost very much at all. The wider picture is obviously monitoring and inconvenience, certainly in the United Kingdom where a lot of anticoagulation monitoring is centralized either in warfarin clinics or the patient going up to the GP and having to take time off. Also, then there are other aspects in terms of the possibility of superiority of the new drugs in reducing strokes and more importantly intracranial hemorrhage, where if an intracranial hemorrhage occurs the mortality is extremely high and morbidity is great. I agree with the point you made that I think an initial batch of patients, most suitable for the new drugs would be those difficult to either attend for monitoring or those we have difficulty keeping within an adequate INR therapeutic range. What will be a real challenge to all of us is the newly diagnosed atrial fibrillation patient who needs anticoagulation therapy, and once they ve done their research on the Internet or wherever, they are going to say I would really much like to be on this new drug. Dr. Lindsay: There is maybe even a more practical issue here, and that is there are a lot of patients who just aren t treated. I think many family practitioners are busy. They find it difficult to regulate warfarin, so either they treat them with aspirin or unfortunately often with nothing. Pg.17

18 Evaluating the Data: What Recent Clinical Trials Can Teach Us About Preventing Atrial Fibrillation-Related Stroke CME Dr. Fox: The registries across Europe have shown this significant proportion of patients, maybe a third of high-risk patients with CHADS2 of 2 or more, who are currently either on nothing. Dr. Lindsay: Nothing. Dr. Fox: Or some of them are on aspirin. Dr. Lindsay: So these new drugs may reduce the threshold of getting started on some effective agent, which is not reflected in the studies because they are a very different population. Dr. Lip: That sort of thing you need to look at either real-world analyses, but I ll start on making a point. Even a recent Markov decision model published by Mark Eckman, modeling the impact of new drugs by balancing the relative hazard of stroke vs the relative hazard of intracranial hemorrhage, concluded that we should be treating with a newer anticoagulant therapy which gives us a lower annual stroke rate of 0.9% per year. Also, in terms of how the approach has been in Europe with the new guidelines, if you want to look at the net clinical benefit, the net clinical benefit balancing stroke vs intracranial hemorrhage is only negative at a CHA2DS2-VASc score of 0 because they are so low risk. Dr. Lindsay: Keith, maybe we can close by having you comment on your thoughts on special populations. For example, I don t think there s much experience in children or at least limited experience with these drugs. I doubt that they have been used in pregnancy. I m not sure what the concerns are for that, and perhaps certain minority groups haven t been included in some of these trials. Could you comment on that? Dr. Fox: There are challenges in how you translate these trials out into practice, and I think that the population of patients that knock on our doors most who are interested in the new drugs are actually some of the valve patients and of course prosthetic valves, they ve been excluded, and perhaps moving into the aortic bioprosthetic valve first in order to be cautious might be one of the ways to go. Pg.18

19 medscape.org/spotlight/ anticoagulants or theheart.org/spotlight/anticoagulants Dr. Lindsay: I d like to thank the panel. I think this was a great discussion and all of the data that you put together. I think there is yet a lot of study to be done with these drugs as we look at these special populations and how they ll be used. But I think we see a clear future for these drugs, and in many cases replacing warfarin in day-to-day management of patients who are at risk for stroke from atrial fibrillation. Thank you very much. Pg.19

20 Evaluating the Data: What Recent Clinical Trials Can Teach Us About Preventing Atrial Fibrillation-Related Stroke CME Medscape, LLC, 825 Eighth Avenue 11th Floor New York, NY Pg.20

A Clinical Context Report

A Clinical Context Report Stroke Prevention in Atrial Fibrillation An Expert Commentary With Kenneth W. Mahaffey, MD A Clinical Context Report Stroke Prevention in Atrial Fibrillation Expert Commentary Jointly Sponsored by: and

More information

Engage AF-TIMI 48. Edoxaban in AF: What can we expect? Cardiology Update John Camm. St. George s University of London United Kingdom

Engage AF-TIMI 48. Edoxaban in AF: What can we expect? Cardiology Update John Camm. St. George s University of London United Kingdom Cardiology Update 2013 N S N O N H O H N S1 pocket Aryl binding N site O O N H N Cl Engage AF-TIMI 48 Edoxaban in AF: What can we expect? John Camm St. George s University of London United Kingdom Advisor

More information

ESC Congress 2012, Munich

ESC Congress 2012, Munich ESC Congress 2012, Munich Anticoagulation in Atrial Fibrillation 2012: Which Anticoagulant for Which Patient? Stefan H. Hohnloser J.W. Goethe University Frankfurt am Main S.H.H. has served as a consultant,

More information

Individualizing VTE Treatment and Prevention of Recurrence: The Place for Direct Oral Anticoagulants in VTE

Individualizing VTE Treatment and Prevention of Recurrence: The Place for Direct Oral Anticoagulants in VTE Transcript Details This is a transcript of a continuing medical education (CME) activity accessible on the ReachMD network. Additional media formats for the activity and full activity details (including

More information

ARISTOTLE Demonstrated that ELIQUIS is the First Oral Anticoagulant to Significantly Reduce All-Cause Death

ARISTOTLE Demonstrated that ELIQUIS is the First Oral Anticoagulant to Significantly Reduce All-Cause Death ELIQUIS (apixaban) was Superior to Warfarin for the Reduction of Stroke or Systemic Embolism with Significantly Less Major Bleeding in Patients with Atrial Fibrillation in Phase 3 ARISTOTLE Trial ARISTOTLE

More information

Analysing Apixaban: Potential Growth Driver for Pfizer and Bristol Myers Squibb. Tro Kalayjian Chief Medical Analyst Chimera Research Group

Analysing Apixaban: Potential Growth Driver for Pfizer and Bristol Myers Squibb. Tro Kalayjian Chief Medical Analyst Chimera Research Group Analysing Apixaban: Potential Growth Driver for Pfizer and Bristol Myers Squibb Tro Kalayjian Chief Medical Analyst Chimera Research Group Prevalence of AFib in the US is expected to increase upwards of

More information

Anticoagulation Beyond Coumadin

Anticoagulation Beyond Coumadin Anticoagulation Beyond Coumadin Saturday, September 21, 2013 Crystal Mountain Resort and Spa Pratik Bhattacharya MD, MPH Stroke Neurologist, Michigan Stroke Network; Assistant Professor of Neurology; Wayne

More information

Events after discontinuation of randomized treatment at the end of the ARISTOTLE trial

Events after discontinuation of randomized treatment at the end of the ARISTOTLE trial Events after discontinuation of randomized treatment at the end of the ARISTOTLE trial Christopher Granger, John Alexander, Michael Hanna, Jerry Wang, Puneet Mohan, Jack Lawrence, Elaine Hylek, Jack Ansell,

More information

TSHP 2014 Annual Seminar 1

TSHP 2014 Annual Seminar 1 Debate: Versus the Rest of the World for Stroke Prevention in Non-valvular Atrial Fibrillation Matthew Wanat, PharmD, BCPS Clinical Assistant Professor University of Houston College of Pharmacy Clinical

More information

Show Me the Outcomes!

Show Me the Outcomes! Show Me the Outcomes! Real-World Safety Data on Oral Anticoagulants in Nonvalvular Atrial Fibrillation Gabby Anderson, PharmD PGY1 Pharmacy Resident anderson.gabrielle@mayo.edu Pharmacy Grand Rounds October

More information

NOAs for stroke prevention in Atrial Fibrillation: potential advantages in the elderly patients. Giancarlo Agnelli

NOAs for stroke prevention in Atrial Fibrillation: potential advantages in the elderly patients. Giancarlo Agnelli NOAs for stroke prevention in Atrial Fibrillation: potential advantages in the elderly patients Giancarlo Agnelli Internal & Cardiovascular Medicine - Stroke Unit University of Perugia, Italy My talk today

More information

A Patient Unsuitable for VKA Treatment

A Patient Unsuitable for VKA Treatment Will Apixaban change practice in atrial fibrillation? A Patient Unsuitable for VKA Treatment Professor Yoseph Rozenman The E. Wolfson Medical Center Jerusalem June 2013 Disclosures I have the following

More information

Old and New Anticoagulants For Stroke Prevention Benefits and Risks

Old and New Anticoagulants For Stroke Prevention Benefits and Risks Old and New Anticoagulants For Stroke Prevention Benefits and Risks September 15, 2014 Jonathan L. Halperin, M.D. The Cardiovascular Institute Mount Sinai Medical Center Disclosure Relationships with Industry

More information

Lessons from recent antithrombotic studies and trials in atrial fibrillation

Lessons from recent antithrombotic studies and trials in atrial fibrillation Lessons from recent antithrombotic studies and trials in atrial fibrillation Thromboembolism cause of stroke in AF Lars Wallentin Uppsala Clinical Research Centre (UCR) Uppsala Disclosures for Lars Wallentin

More information

NOAC trials for AF: A review

NOAC trials for AF: A review NOAC trials for AF: A review Chern-En Chiang, MD, PhD, FACC, FESC General Clinical Research Center Division of Cardiology Taipei Veterans General Hospital National Yang-Ming University Taipei, Taiwan Presenter

More information

Novel Anticoagulants : Bleeding and Bridging

Novel Anticoagulants : Bleeding and Bridging Novel Anticoagulants : Bleeding and Bridging Michael D. Ezekowitz, MBChB, DPhil, FACC, FAHA, FRCP, MA Professor, Thomas Jefferson Medical School Director Atrial Fibrillation Research and Education The

More information

FINAL CDEC RECOMMENDATION

FINAL CDEC RECOMMENDATION FINAL CDEC RECOMMENDATION APIXABAN (Eliquis Bristol-Myers Squibb Canada and Pfizer Canada Inc.) New Indication: Prevention of Stroke and Systemic Embolism in Patients with Atrial Fibrillation Recommendation:

More information

IS THERE STILL A PLACE FOR VITAMINE K ANTAGONISTS?

IS THERE STILL A PLACE FOR VITAMINE K ANTAGONISTS? IS THERE STILL A PLACE FOR VITAMINE K ANTAGONISTS? J.Y. LE HEUZEY Georges Pompidou Hospital, René Descartes University, Paris H E G P Munich, August 27, 2012 Disclosure Consultant / Conferences / Advisory

More information

Technology appraisal guidance Published: 27 February 2013 nice.org.uk/guidance/ta275

Technology appraisal guidance Published: 27 February 2013 nice.org.uk/guidance/ta275 Apixaban for preventing enting stroke and systemic embolism in people with nonvalvular atrial fibrillation Technology appraisal guidance Published: 27 February 2013 nice.org.uk/guidance/ta275 NICE 2018.

More information

Edoxaban in Atrial Fibrillation

Edoxaban in Atrial Fibrillation Edoxaban in Atrial Fibrillation Glenn Gormley, MD, PhD Senior Executive Officer and Global Head of R&D, Daiichi Sankyo Co., Ltd Nov. 4, 2014 Tuesday Background Based on the results of ENGAGE AF-TIMI 48,

More information

Apixaban for stroke prevention in atrial fibrillation. August 2010

Apixaban for stroke prevention in atrial fibrillation. August 2010 Apixaban for stroke prevention in atrial fibrillation August 2010 This technology summary is based on information available at the time of research and a limited literature search. It is not intended to

More information

Anticoagulation: Novel Agents

Anticoagulation: Novel Agents Anticoagulation: Novel Agents Scott C. Woller, MD Medical Director, Anticoagulation Management, Intermountain Healthcare Central Region, co-director Venous Thromboembolism Program, Intermountain Medical

More information

Atrial Fibrillation Implementation challenges. Lesley Edgar Ross Maconachie

Atrial Fibrillation Implementation challenges. Lesley Edgar Ross Maconachie Atrial Fibrillation Implementation challenges Lesley Edgar Ross Maconachie Atrial Fibrillation Most common heart rhythm disturbance Rapid and irregular electrical signals Reduced efficiency of blood flow

More information

Canadian Society of Internal Medicine Annual Meeting 2016 Montreal, QC

Canadian Society of Internal Medicine Annual Meeting 2016 Montreal, QC Canadian Society of Internal Medicine Annual Meeting 2016 Montreal, QC DEBATE: DOAC vs Good Old Warfarin André Roussin MD, FRCP, CSPQ CHUM and ICM/MHI Associate professor University of Montreal A. Roussin

More information

Oral Anticoagulation Drug Class Prior Authorization Protocol

Oral Anticoagulation Drug Class Prior Authorization Protocol Oral Anticoagulation Drug Class Prior Authorization Protocol Line of Business: Medicaid P & T Approval Date: February 21, 2018 Effective Date: April 1, 2018 This policy has been developed through review

More information

Modern management of atrial fibrillation, from blood pressure control to anticoagulation

Modern management of atrial fibrillation, from blood pressure control to anticoagulation Modern management of atrial fibrillation, from blood pressure control to anticoagulation Adel Khalifa S. Hamad, BMS, MD, FRCP(Canada) Consultant Cardiologist & Interventional Cardiac Electrophysiologist

More information

Afib, Stroke, and DOAC. Albert Luo, MD. Cardiology Lindsey Frischmann, DO. Neurology Xiao Cai, MD. HBS

Afib, Stroke, and DOAC. Albert Luo, MD. Cardiology Lindsey Frischmann, DO. Neurology Xiao Cai, MD. HBS Afib, Stroke, and DOAC Albert Luo, MD. Cardiology Lindsey Frischmann, DO. Neurology Xiao Cai, MD. HBS Disclosure of Relevant Financial Relationships I have no relevant financial relationships with commercial

More information

NeuroPI Case Study: Anticoagulant Therapy

NeuroPI Case Study: Anticoagulant Therapy Case: An 82-year-old man presents to the hospital following a transient episode of left visual field changes. His symptoms lasted 20 minutes and resolved spontaneously. He has a normal neurological examination

More information

Debate: New Generation Anti-Coagulation Agents are a Better Choice than Warfarin in the Management of AF

Debate: New Generation Anti-Coagulation Agents are a Better Choice than Warfarin in the Management of AF Debate: New Generation Anti-Coagulation Agents are a Better Choice than Warfarin in the Management of AF Bradley P. Knight, MD Director of Cardiac Electrophysiology Bluhm Cardiovascular Institute Northwestern

More information

New options in Stroke Prevention in AF Paul Dorian University of Toronto St Michael s Hospital

New options in Stroke Prevention in AF Paul Dorian University of Toronto St Michael s Hospital New options in Stroke Prevention in AF Paul Dorian University of Toronto St Michael s Hospital Disclosures: Honoraria, research support, and consulting f Sanofi, Boehringer-Ingleheim, Portola, BMS, Bayer,

More information

AF stroke prevention in the Canadian context

AF stroke prevention in the Canadian context AF stroke prevention in the Canadian context 5 th Annual State of the Heart Toronto, May 31, 2014 Andrew C.T. Ha, MD, MSc, FRCPC Cardiac Electrophysiology Toronto General Hospital, University Health Network

More information

New Aspects in the Diagnosis and Treatment of Atrial Fibrillation: Antithrombotic Therapy

New Aspects in the Diagnosis and Treatment of Atrial Fibrillation: Antithrombotic Therapy New Aspects in the Diagnosis and Treatment of Atrial Fibrillation: Antithrombotic Therapy Hans-Christoph Diener Department of Neurology and Stroke Center University Hospital Essen Germany Conflict of Interest

More information

6 th ACC-SHA Joint Meeting Jeddah, Saudi Arabia

6 th ACC-SHA Joint Meeting Jeddah, Saudi Arabia 6 th ACC-SHA Joint Meeting Jeddah, Saudi Arabia October 31 st - November 1 st, 2015 NOACS vs. Coumadin in Atrial Fibrillation: Is It Worth to Switch? Raed Sweidan, MD, FACC Consultant and Head of Cardiac

More information

Secondary Preven-on of Thromboembolic Stroke: Clinical Data and Recommenda-ons from the ESC Atrial Fibrilla-on Guideline Update 2012

Secondary Preven-on of Thromboembolic Stroke: Clinical Data and Recommenda-ons from the ESC Atrial Fibrilla-on Guideline Update 2012 Secondary Preven-on of Thromboembolic Stroke: Clinical Data and Recommenda-ons from the ESC Atrial Fibrilla-on Guideline Update 2012 Professor Dan Atar Head, Dept. of Cardiology Councillor of the ESC,

More information

Clinical issues which drug for which patient

Clinical issues which drug for which patient Anticoagulants - a matter of heart! Towards a bright future? Clinical issues which drug for which patient Sabine Eichinger Dept. of Medicine I Medical University of Vienna/Austria Conflicts of interest

More information

Antithrombotics in Stroke management

Antithrombotics in Stroke management Antithrombotics in Stroke management Faculty: Robert Beveridge Relationships with commercial interests: Grants/Research Support: N/A Speakers Bureau/Honoraria: Astra Zeneca, Bayer, Boerhinger Ingelheim,

More information

NUOVI ANTICOAGULANTI NELL ANZIANO: indicazioni e controindicazioni. Mario Cavazza Medicina d Urgenza Pronto Soccorso AOU di Bologna

NUOVI ANTICOAGULANTI NELL ANZIANO: indicazioni e controindicazioni. Mario Cavazza Medicina d Urgenza Pronto Soccorso AOU di Bologna NUOVI ANTICOAGULANTI NELL ANZIANO: indicazioni e controindicazioni Mario Cavazza Medicina d Urgenza Pronto Soccorso AOU di Bologna Two major concerns Atrial Fibrillation: Epidemiology The No. 1 preventable

More information

Is There a Role For Pharmacokinetic/ Pharmacodynamics Guided Dosing For Novel Anticoagulants? Christopher Granger

Is There a Role For Pharmacokinetic/ Pharmacodynamics Guided Dosing For Novel Anticoagulants? Christopher Granger Is There a Role For Pharmacokinetic/ Pharmacodynamics Guided Dosing For Novel Anticoagulants? Christopher Granger 1 Disclosures Research contracts: Armetheon, AstraZeneca, Bayer, Boehringer Ingelheim,

More information

Disclosing medical errors to patients: Recent developments and future directions

Disclosing medical errors to patients: Recent developments and future directions it is exciting to see all of you here because when I look back on my time in g y y medical education and look at practice now, I think this area of how we communicate with patients when something is going

More information

Oral rivaroxaban versus standard therapy for the acute and continued treatment of symptomatic deep vein thrombosis. The EINSTEIN DVT study.

Oral rivaroxaban versus standard therapy for the acute and continued treatment of symptomatic deep vein thrombosis. The EINSTEIN DVT study. Oral rivaroxaban versus standard therapy for the acute and continued treatment of symptomatic deep vein thrombosis. The EINSTEIN DVT study Comments Harald Darius, Berlin Disclosures for Harald Darius Research

More information

You re listening to an audio module from BMJ Learning. Hallo. I'm Anna Sayburn, Senior Editor with the BMJ Group s Consumer Health Team.

You re listening to an audio module from BMJ Learning. Hallo. I'm Anna Sayburn, Senior Editor with the BMJ Group s Consumer Health Team. Transcript of learning module Shared decision making (Dur: 26' 13") Contributors: Anna Sayburn and Alf Collins Available online at: http://learning.bmj.com/ V/O: You re listening to an audio module from

More information

The HEMORR 2 HAGES, ATRIA and the HAS-BLED bleeding risk prediction scores in anticoagulated atrial fibrillation patients : The AMADEUS study

The HEMORR 2 HAGES, ATRIA and the HAS-BLED bleeding risk prediction scores in anticoagulated atrial fibrillation patients : The AMADEUS study The HEMORR 2 HAGES, ATRIA and the HAS-BLED bleeding risk prediction scores in anticoagulated atrial fibrillation patients : The AMADEUS study Apostolakis S 1, Lane DA 1, Buller H 2, Lip GY 1 1 University

More information

Cardiovascular Controversies: Exploring the ACC and AHA Guidelines on the Treatment of Blood Cholesterol

Cardiovascular Controversies: Exploring the ACC and AHA Guidelines on the Treatment of Blood Cholesterol Transcript Details This is a transcript of a continuing medical education (CME) activity accessible on the ReachMD network. Additional media formats for the activity and full activity details (including

More information

Deciphering Chronic Pain and Pain Medicine

Deciphering Chronic Pain and Pain Medicine Deciphering Chronic Pain and Pain Medicine Deciphering Chronic Pain and Pain Medicine Hello and welcome to Primary Care Today on ReachMD. I m your host, Dr. Brian McDonough, and I m very happy to have

More information

Σεμινάπιο Ομάδων Δπγαζίαρ ΟΜΑΓΑ ΔΡΓΑΣΙΑΣ ΗΛΔΚΤΡΟΦΥΣΙΟΛΟΓΙΑΣ ΚΑΙ ΒΗΜΑΤΟΓΟΤΗΣΗΣ Κολπική μαπμαπςγή

Σεμινάπιο Ομάδων Δπγαζίαρ ΟΜΑΓΑ ΔΡΓΑΣΙΑΣ ΗΛΔΚΤΡΟΦΥΣΙΟΛΟΓΙΑΣ ΚΑΙ ΒΗΜΑΤΟΓΟΤΗΣΗΣ Κολπική μαπμαπςγή Σεμινάπιο Ομάδων Δπγαζίαρ ΟΜΑΓΑ ΔΡΓΑΣΙΑΣ ΗΛΔΚΤΡΟΦΥΣΙΟΛΟΓΙΑΣ ΚΑΙ ΒΗΜΑΤΟΓΟΤΗΣΗΣ Κολπική μαπμαπςγή Δξελίξειρ ζηην ανηιπηκηική αγωγή ζε αζθενείρ με κολπική μαπμαπςγή Ξςδώναρ Σωηήπιορ Μονάδα Δμθπαγμάηων και

More information

PRESENTATION TITLE. Case Studies

PRESENTATION TITLE. Case Studies PRESENTATION TITLE Case Studies 1) SH is a 67 year old male. He has a history of type 2 diabetes, controlled hypertension and peripheral artery disease. He takes naproxen 500mg bd for arthritis and admits

More information

NATIONAL INSTITUTE FOR HEALTH AND CLINICAL EXCELLENCE. Single Technology Appraisal (STA)

NATIONAL INSTITUTE FOR HEALTH AND CLINICAL EXCELLENCE. Single Technology Appraisal (STA) Rivaroxaban for the prevention of stroke and systemic embolism in people with atrial fibrillation Thank you for agreeing to give us a statement on your organisation s view of the technology and the way

More information

Drug Class Monograph

Drug Class Monograph Drug Class Monograph Class: Oral Anticoagulants Drug: Coumadin (warfarin), Eliquis (apixaban), Pradaxa (dabigatran), Savaysa (edoxaban), arelto (rivaroxaban) Formulary Medications: Eliquis (apixaban),

More information

ANTI-THROMBOTIC THERAPY in NON-VALVULAR ATRIAL FIBRILLATION

ANTI-THROMBOTIC THERAPY in NON-VALVULAR ATRIAL FIBRILLATION ANTI-THROMBOTIC THERAPY in NON-VALVULAR ATRIAL FIBRILLATION Colin Edwards Auckland Heart Group Waitemata Health June 2015 PFIZER Lecture series Disclosures EPIDEMIOLOGY Atrial fibrillation is the most

More information

MODULE 1: Stroke Prevention in Atrial Fibrillation Benjamin Bell, MD, FRCPC

MODULE 1: Stroke Prevention in Atrial Fibrillation Benjamin Bell, MD, FRCPC MODULE 1: Stroke Prevention in Atrial Fibrillation Benjamin Bell, MD, FRCPC Specialty: General Internal Medicine Lecturer, Department of Medicine University of Toronto Staff Physician, General Internal

More information

Results from RE-LY and RELY-ABLE

Results from RE-LY and RELY-ABLE Results from RE-LY and RELY-ABLE Assessment of the safety and efficacy of dabigatran etexilate (Pradaxa ) in longterm stroke prevention EXECUTIVE SUMMARY Dabigatran etexilate (Pradaxa ) has shown a consistent

More information

Welcome to Progress in Community Health Partnerships latest episode of our Beyond the Manuscript podcast. In

Welcome to Progress in Community Health Partnerships latest episode of our Beyond the Manuscript podcast. In Beyond the Manuscript 45 Podcast Interview Transcript Larkin Strong, Zeno Franco, Mark Flower Welcome to Progress in Community Health Partnerships latest episode of our Beyond the Manuscript podcast. In

More information

Relationship between Center Time in Therapeutic Range and Comparative Treatment Effect of Rivaroxaban and Warfarin: Results from the ROCKET AF Trial

Relationship between Center Time in Therapeutic Range and Comparative Treatment Effect of Rivaroxaban and Warfarin: Results from the ROCKET AF Trial Relationship between Center Time in Therapeutic Range and Comparative Treatment Effect of Rivaroxaban and Warfarin: Results from the ROCKET AF Trial Jonathan P. Piccini, Frank Harrell, Yulia Lokhnygina,

More information

Anticoagulation Task Force

Anticoagulation Task Force Anticoagulation Task Force Newest Recommendations Donald Zabriskie, BPharm, MBA, RPh Pharmacy Patient Care Services Cleveland Clinic- Fairview Hospital THE DRUGS THE PERFECT ANTICOAGULANT Oral administration

More information

Atrial Fibrillation Community of Practice Audioconference November 14, 2012

Atrial Fibrillation Community of Practice Audioconference November 14, 2012 Atrial Fibrillation Community of Practice Audioconference November 14, 2012 MODERATOR: Welcome to the Community of Practice interactive clinical discussion in atrial fibrillation management with faculty

More information

Atrial Fibrillation. 2 nd Annual National Hospitalist Conference San Antonio, TX September 7, 2018

Atrial Fibrillation. 2 nd Annual National Hospitalist Conference San Antonio, TX September 7, 2018 2 nd Annual National Hospitalist Conference San Antonio, TX September 7, 2018, MSc, FACP, SFHM Division of Hospital Medicine Henry Ford Hospital Detroit, USA Clinical Associate Professor of Medicine Wayne

More information

Section 4 Decision-making

Section 4 Decision-making Decision-making : Decision-making Summary Conversations about treatments Participants were asked to describe the conversation that they had with the clinician about treatment at diagnosis. The most common

More information

An Update on BioMarin Clinical Research and Studies in the PKU Community

An Update on BioMarin Clinical Research and Studies in the PKU Community An Update on BioMarin Clinical Research and Studies in the PKU Community Barbara Burton, MD, Professor of Pediatrics, Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine, Director of PKU Clinic, Children

More information

Kenneth W. Mahaffey, MD and Keith AA Fox, MB ChB

Kenneth W. Mahaffey, MD and Keith AA Fox, MB ChB Once-daily oral direct factor Xa inhibition Compared with vitamin K antagonism for prevention of stroke and Embolism Trial in Atrial Fibrillation Kenneth W. Mahaffey, MD and Keith AA Fox, MB ChB on behalf

More information

Joshua D. Lenchus, DO, RPh, FACP, SFHM Associate Professor of Medicine and Anesthesiology University of Miami Miller School of Medicine

Joshua D. Lenchus, DO, RPh, FACP, SFHM Associate Professor of Medicine and Anesthesiology University of Miami Miller School of Medicine Joshua D. Lenchus, DO, RPh, FACP, SFHM Associate Professor of Medicine and Anesthesiology University of Miami Miller School of Medicine Antithrombotics Antiplatelets Aspirin Ticlopidine Prasugrel Dipyridamole

More information

The HPV Data Is In What Do the Newest Updates in Screening Mean For Your Patients?

The HPV Data Is In What Do the Newest Updates in Screening Mean For Your Patients? Transcript Details This is a transcript of a continuing medical education (CME) activity accessible on the ReachMD network. Additional media formats for the activity and full activity details (including

More information

Primary Prevention of Stroke

Primary Prevention of Stroke Primary Prevention of Stroke Dr Chris Ellis Cardiologist Green Lane CVS Service, Auckland City Hospital & Auckland Heart Group, Mercy Hospital, Auckland 67 Pages Long, 735 References 29 Sub-Headings for

More information

DOACs for Atrial Fibrillation, Why Are So Many AF Patients NOT on Anticoagulation? David Garcia, MD April 2017

DOACs for Atrial Fibrillation, Why Are So Many AF Patients NOT on Anticoagulation? David Garcia, MD April 2017 DOACs for Atrial Fibrillation, Why Are So Many AF Patients NOT on Anticoagulation? David Garcia, MD April 2017 Disclosures for David Garcia Consultancy: Boehringer Ingelheim; Bristol-Meyers Squibb; Daiichi

More information

Pros and Cons of Individual Agents Based on Large Trial Results: RELY, ROCKET, ARISTOTLE, AVERROES

Pros and Cons of Individual Agents Based on Large Trial Results: RELY, ROCKET, ARISTOTLE, AVERROES Pros and Cons of Individual Agents Based on Large Trial Results: RELY, ROCKET, ARISTOTLE, AVERROES Ralph L. Sacco, MS MD FAAN FAHA Olemberg Family Chair in Neurological Disorders Miller Professor of Neurology,

More information

ESC Heart & Brain Workshop

ESC Heart & Brain Workshop Supported by Bayer, Bristol-Myers Squibb and Pfizer Alliance, Boehringer Ingelheim, Daiichi Sankyo Europe GmbH and Medtronic in the form of educational grants. The scientific programme has not been influenced

More information

Combining Individualized Treatment Options with Patient-Clinician Dialogue

Combining Individualized Treatment Options with Patient-Clinician Dialogue Transcript Details This is a transcript of a continuing medical education (CME) activity accessible on the ReachMD network. Additional media formats for the activity and full activity details (including

More information

ADC Slides for Presentation 02/10/2017

ADC Slides for Presentation 02/10/2017 ADC 2017 Slides for Presentation ANTI THROMBOTIC THERAPY FOR NON VALVULAR ATRIAL FIBRILLATION IN PATIENTS WITH CHRONIC KIDNEY DISEASE: CURRENT VIEWS Martin A. Alpert, MD Brent M. Parker Professor of Medicine

More information

Carotid Ultrasound Scans for Assessing Cardiovascular Risk

Carotid Ultrasound Scans for Assessing Cardiovascular Risk Transcript Details This is a transcript of an educational program accessible on the ReachMD network. Details about the program and additional media formats for the program are accessible by visiting: https://reachmd.com/programs/lipid-luminations/carotid-ultrasound-scans-for-assessing-cardiovascularrisk/4004/

More information

Perioperative Stroke for the General Anesthesiologist and Specialist

Perioperative Stroke for the General Anesthesiologist and Specialist Perioperative Stroke for the General Anesthesiologist and Specialist 2017 {Music} Dr. Alan Jay Schwartz: Hello. This is Alan Jay Schwartz, Editor-in-Chief of the American Society of Anesthesiologists 2017

More information

Warfarin for Long-Term Anticoagulation. Disadvantages of Warfarin. Narrow Therapeutic Window. Warfarin vs. NOACs. Challenges Monitoring Warfarin

Warfarin for Long-Term Anticoagulation. Disadvantages of Warfarin. Narrow Therapeutic Window. Warfarin vs. NOACs. Challenges Monitoring Warfarin 1 2:15 pm The Era of : Selecting the Best Approach to Treatment SPEAKER Gregory Piazza, MD, MS Presenter Disclosure Information The following relationships exist related to this presentation: Gregory Piazza,

More information

Slide 1: Perioperative Management of Anticoagulation

Slide 1: Perioperative Management of Anticoagulation Perioperative Management of Anticoagulation by Steven L. Cohn, MD, FACP Director, Medical Consultation Service, Kings County Hospital Center, Clinical Professor of Medicine, SUNY Downstate, Brooklyn, NY

More information

New Age Anticoagulants: Bleeding Considerations

New Age Anticoagulants: Bleeding Considerations Ontario Regional Blood Coordinating Network March 23, 2012 New Age Anticoagulants: Bleeding Considerations Bill Geerts, MD, FRCPC Thromboembolism Specialist, Sunnybrook HSC Professor of Medicine, University

More information

Is a Mediterranean diet best for preventing heart disease?

Is a Mediterranean diet best for preventing heart disease? Is a Mediterranean diet best for preventing heart disease? By Peter Attia, M.D. This week an article titled Primary Prevention of Cardiovascular Disease with a Mediterranean Diet was featured in the New

More information

A Case Review: Treatment-Naïve Patient with Advanced NSCLC: Smoker with Metastatic Squamous Cell Tumor

A Case Review: Treatment-Naïve Patient with Advanced NSCLC: Smoker with Metastatic Squamous Cell Tumor Transcript Details This is a transcript of a continuing medical education (CME) activity accessible on the ReachMD network. Additional media formats for the activity and full activity details (including

More information

Direct Oral Anticoagulants An Update

Direct Oral Anticoagulants An Update Oct. 26, 2017 Direct Oral Anticoagulants An Update Kathleen Heintz, DO, FACC Assistant Professor of Medicine Cooper Heart Institute Direct Oral Anticoagulants: DISCLAIMERS No Conflicts of Interest So what

More information

CADTH CANADIAN DRUG EXPERT COMMITTEE FINAL RECOMMENDATION

CADTH CANADIAN DRUG EXPERT COMMITTEE FINAL RECOMMENDATION CADTH CANADIAN DRUG EXPERT COMMITTEE FINAL RECOMMENDATION Edoxaban (Lixiana SERVIER Canada Inc.) Indication: Prevention of Stroke and Systemic Embolic Events in Patients With Nonvalvular Atrial Fibrillation

More information

New Antithrombotic Agents DISCLOSURE

New Antithrombotic Agents DISCLOSURE New Antithrombotic Agents DISCLOSURE Relevant Financial Relationship(s) Speaker Bureau None Research Alexion (PNH) delought@ohsu.edu Tom DeLoughery, MD FACP FAWM Oregon Health and Sciences University What

More information

INR as a Biomarker: Anticoagulation in Atrial Fib, Heart Failure, and Cardiovascular Disease Daniel Blanchard, MD, FACC, FAHA

INR as a Biomarker: Anticoagulation in Atrial Fib, Heart Failure, and Cardiovascular Disease Daniel Blanchard, MD, FACC, FAHA INR as a Biomarker: Anticoagulation in Atrial Fib, Heart Failure, and Cardiovascular Disease Daniel Blanchard, MD, FACC, FAHA Professor of Medicine Director, Cardiology Fellowship Program Sulpizio Cardiovascular

More information

Normalizing STI Screening: The Patient Impact

Normalizing STI Screening: The Patient Impact Transcript Details This is a transcript of an educational program accessible on the ReachMD network. Details about the program and additional media formats for the program are accessible by visiting: https://reachmd.com/programs/womens-health-update/normalizing-sti-screening-the-patientimpact/10074/

More information

Practical Considerations for Using Oral Anticoagulants in Patients with Chronic Kidney Disease

Practical Considerations for Using Oral Anticoagulants in Patients with Chronic Kidney Disease Practical Considerations for Using Oral Anticoagulants in Patients with Chronic Kidney Disease Cyrille K. Cornelio, Pharm.D. PGY2 Cardiology Pharmacy Resident The University of Oklahoma College of Pharmacy

More information

Scouter Support Training Participant Workbook

Scouter Support Training Participant Workbook Scouter Support Training Participant Workbook Version 2.1 June 15, 2011 Minor changes November 5, 2012 For use with the Scouter Support Playbook Scouter Support Training: Trainer s Manual 2 Participant

More information

ADVANCES IN ANTICOAGULATION

ADVANCES IN ANTICOAGULATION ADVANCES IN ANTICOAGULATION The Clinicians Perspective Claudine M. Lewis Cardiologist OUTLINE Indications for anticoagulants Review - Physiology of Hemostasis Types of anticoagulants New anticoagulants

More information

Childhood Stroke: Risk Factors, Symptoms and Prognosis

Childhood Stroke: Risk Factors, Symptoms and Prognosis Transcript Details This is a transcript of an educational program accessible on the ReachMD network. Details about the program and additional media formats for the program are accessible by visiting: https://reachmd.com/programs/focus-on-childrens-health/childhood-stroke-risk-factors-symptoms-andprognosis/3657/

More information

Anticoagulation with Direct oral anticoagulants (DOACs) and advances in peri-procedural interruption of anticoagulation-- Bridging

Anticoagulation with Direct oral anticoagulants (DOACs) and advances in peri-procedural interruption of anticoagulation-- Bridging Anticoagulation with Direct oral anticoagulants (DOACs) and advances in peri-procedural interruption of anticoagulation-- Bridging Scott C. Woller, MD Co-Director, Thrombosis Program Intermountain Medical

More information

MMS/Mass Coalition Program, Nov. 4, 2008 Patients with AF: Who Should be on Warfarin?

MMS/Mass Coalition Program, Nov. 4, 2008 Patients with AF: Who Should be on Warfarin? MMS/Mass Coalition Program, Nov. 4, 2008 Patients with AF: Who Should be on Warfarin? Daniel E. Singer, MD Massachusetts General Hospital Harvard Medical School 1 Speaker Disclosure Information DISCLOSURE

More information

Genotype Testing on Current Cervical Cancer Algorithms

Genotype Testing on Current Cervical Cancer Algorithms Transcript Details This is a transcript of a continuing medical education (CME) activity accessible on the ReachMD network. Additional media formats for the activity and full activity details (including

More information

NOACs in AF. Dr Fiona Stewart. Auckland Heart Group and Auckland DHB

NOACs in AF. Dr Fiona Stewart. Auckland Heart Group and Auckland DHB NOACs in AF Dr Fiona Stewart Auckland Heart Group and Auckland DHB NOACS for AF True/False All patients should have a CHA 2 DS 2 VASc risk assessment on diagnosis of AF NOACS are more effective than warfarin

More information

Initial assessment of patient with AF in primary care DR BRUCE TAYLOR GPwSI Cardiology SCN Merseyside and Cheshire Clinical Lead Primary care

Initial assessment of patient with AF in primary care DR BRUCE TAYLOR GPwSI Cardiology SCN Merseyside and Cheshire Clinical Lead Primary care Initial assessment of patient with AF in primary care DR BRUCE TAYLOR GPwSI Cardiology SCN Merseyside and Cheshire Clinical Lead Primary care 11 th and 25 th September 2014 3 KEY OBJECTIVES OF TALK 1.

More information

Expert Tips for Diagnosis and Management of Bacterial Vaginosis

Expert Tips for Diagnosis and Management of Bacterial Vaginosis Transcript Details This is a transcript of an educational program accessible on the ReachMD network. Details about the program and additional media formats for the program are accessible by visiting: https://reachmd.com/miscellaneous/whats-new-bacterial-vaginosis/expert-tips-for-diagnosismanagement-of-bacterial-vaginosis/9894/

More information

Oral Anticoagulants Update. Elizabeth Renner, PharmD, BCPS, BCACP, CACP Outpatient Cardiology and Anticoagulation

Oral Anticoagulants Update. Elizabeth Renner, PharmD, BCPS, BCACP, CACP Outpatient Cardiology and Anticoagulation Oral Anticoagulants Update Elizabeth Renner, PharmD, BCPS, BCACP, CACP Outpatient Cardiology and Anticoagulation Objectives List the direct oral anticoagulant (DOAC) drugs currently available Describe

More information

Reversal of direct oral anticoagulants in the patient with GI bleeding. Marc Carrier

Reversal of direct oral anticoagulants in the patient with GI bleeding. Marc Carrier Reversal of direct oral anticoagulants in the patient with GI bleeding Marc Carrier Disclosure Faculty: Dr. Marc Carrier Relationships with commercial interests: Grants/Research Support: Leo Pharma, Bristol

More information

PCSK9 Antibodies for Dyslipidemia: Efficacy, Safety, and Non-Lipid Effects

PCSK9 Antibodies for Dyslipidemia: Efficacy, Safety, and Non-Lipid Effects Transcript Details This is a transcript of an educational program accessible on the ReachMD network. Details about the program and additional media formats for the program are accessible by visiting: https://reachmd.com/programs/lipid-luminations/pcsk9-antibodies-dyslipidemia-efficacy-safety-and-nonlipid-effects/8335/

More information

Technology appraisal guidance Published: 23 September 2015 nice.org.uk/guidance/ta355

Technology appraisal guidance Published: 23 September 2015 nice.org.uk/guidance/ta355 Edoxaban for preventing enting stroke and systemic embolism in people with non- valvular atrial fibrillation Technology appraisal guidance Published: 23 September 2015 nice.org.uk/guidance/ta355 NICE 2015.

More information

Atrial fibrillation and anticoagulation JIR-PING BOEY, DEPARTMENT OF HAEMATOLOGY, FLINDERS MEDICAL CENTRE FEBRUARY 2016

Atrial fibrillation and anticoagulation JIR-PING BOEY, DEPARTMENT OF HAEMATOLOGY, FLINDERS MEDICAL CENTRE FEBRUARY 2016 1 Atrial fibrillation and anticoagulation JIR-PING BOEY, DEPARTMENT OF HAEMATOLOGY, FLINDERS MEDICAL CENTRE FEBRUARY 2016 Disclosures 2 No conflicts of interest Some questions 3 Should my patient with

More information

RETROSPECTIVE CLAIMS DATABASE STUDIES OF DIRECT ORAL ANTICOAGULANTS (DOACS) FOR STROKE PREVENTION IN NONVALVULAR ATRIAL FIBRILLATION

RETROSPECTIVE CLAIMS DATABASE STUDIES OF DIRECT ORAL ANTICOAGULANTS (DOACS) FOR STROKE PREVENTION IN NONVALVULAR ATRIAL FIBRILLATION RETROSPECTIVE CLAIMS DATABASE STUDIES OF DIRECT ORAL ANTICOAGULANTS (DOACS) FOR STROKE PREVENTION IN NONVALVULAR ATRIAL FIBRILLATION Craig I. Coleman, PharmD Professor, University of Connecticut School

More information

US FDA Approves Pradaxa (dabigatran etexilate) a breakthrough treatment for stroke risk reduction in non-valvular atrial fibrillation

US FDA Approves Pradaxa (dabigatran etexilate) a breakthrough treatment for stroke risk reduction in non-valvular atrial fibrillation Press Release For non-us Healthcare Media Boehringer Ingelheim GmbH Corporate Communications US FDA Approves Pradaxa (dabigatran etexilate) a breakthrough treatment for stroke risk reduction in non-valvular

More information

NEW/NOVEL ORAL ANTICOAGULANTS (NOACS): COMPARISON AND FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS

NEW/NOVEL ORAL ANTICOAGULANTS (NOACS): COMPARISON AND FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS NEW/NOVEL ORAL ANTICOAGULANTS (NOACS): COMPARISON AND FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS OBJECTIVES: To provide a comparison of the new/novel oral anticoagulants (NOACs) currently available in Canada. To address

More information

WYNNIS L. TOM, MD: And I m Dr. Wynnis Tom. I m Associate Professor of Dermatology and Pediatrics at the University of California, San Diego.

WYNNIS L. TOM, MD: And I m Dr. Wynnis Tom. I m Associate Professor of Dermatology and Pediatrics at the University of California, San Diego. LEARNING OBJECTIVES At the conclusion of this activity, participants should be better able to: Assess the severity of atopic dermatitis (AD) and its impact on the patient Evaluate treatment efficacy Design

More information

Anticoagulant Treatments for Special Patient Populations

Anticoagulant Treatments for Special Patient Populations Transcript Details This is a transcript of an educational program accessible on the ReachMD network. Details about the program and additional media formats for the program are accessible by visiting: https://reachmd.com/programs/focus-on-pharmacy/anticoagulant-treatments-for-special-patientpopulations/3796/

More information

Management of Anticoagulation during Device Implants; Coumadin to Novel Agents

Management of Anticoagulation during Device Implants; Coumadin to Novel Agents Management of Anticoagulation during Device Implants; Coumadin to Novel Agents DR D Birnie Invited Faculty Core Curriculum Heart Rhythm Society May 8 th 2014 Disclosures Boehringer Ingleheim Research Support

More information