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150 MG DABIGATRAN ETEXILATE SHOWED SIMILAR EFFICACY AND APPARENTLY LOWER BLEEDING COMPARED WITH ENOXAPARIN FOR THE PREVENTION OF VENOUS THROMBOEMBOLISM IN MODERATELY RENALLY IMPAIRED PATIENTS AFTER TOTAL KNEE OR HIP REPLACEMENT SURGERY



Abstract

The oral direct thrombin inhibitor dabigatran etexilate (Pradaxa®) was recently approved in Europe for the prevention of venous thromboembolism (VTE) in patients undergoing elective total knee or total hip replacement surgery. In the Phase III RE-MODEL (Eriksson BI et al. J Thromb Haemost2007; 5: 2178–2185) and RENOVATE (Eriksson BI et al. Lancet2007; 370: 949–956) clinical trials the safety and efficacy of 220 mg and 150 mg dabigatran etexilate once daily were studied. In both trials these doses were compared with 40 mg subcutaneous enoxaparin. A post hoc pooled analysis was performed in patients with moderate renal impairment (glomerular filtration rate ≥ 30 and < 50 ml/min) who participated in these two trials. The primary efficacy endpoint in both studies and the post hoc analysis was total VTE and all cause mortality; the key pre-specified secondary efficacy endpoint was major VTE and VTE-related mortality. Bleeding events (the primary safety endpoint) were blindly adjudicated and categorised as major bleeding events (MBE), which includes surgical site bleedings. A total of 1825 patients were treated with 220 mg dabigatran etexilate, 1866 with 150 mg dabigatran etexilate and 1848 with 40 mg enoxaparin. Of these, 337 patients had moderate renal impairment. 68% of these patients could be evaluated for the primary efficacy endpoint, 72% for the secondary efficacy endpoint, and all patients were included in the safety and bleeding analyses. The incidence of total VTE and all cause mortality was 17.7% (14/79), 23.5% (16/68) and 27.8% (25/90) in the 220 mg dabigatran etexilate, 150 mg dabigatran etexilate and enoxaparin groups, respectively. When the secondary efficacy endpoint was analysed a similar trend was seen, with a descriptive statistical significance for a lower event rate in the 220 mg group: 1.2% (1/83; p=0.04 vs enoxaparin using Fisher’s exact test), 4.3% (3/70) with 150 mg dabigatran etexilate; and 9.0% (8/89) in the enoxaparin group. MBE occurred in 6/113 patients (5.3%) in the 220 mg dabigatran etexilate-treated group, in none of the patients in the 150 mg dabigatran etexilate-treated group (0/96; p=0.04 vs enoxaparin using Fisher’s exact test), and in 6/128 patients (4.7%) receiving enoxaparin. Of note, 3/6 MBE in the 220 mg group started before oral dabigatran etexilate treatment was initiated. In conclusion, oral 150 mg dabigatran etexilate showed similar efficacy compared with subcutaneous enoxaparin in patients with moderate renal impairment undergoing hip or knee replacement surgery, with an apparently lower rate of major bleeding. As bleeding is a major concern, especially in this population, the 150 mg once daily dose of dabigatran etexilate is currently recommended by EMEA for this group.

Correspondence should be addressed to: EFORT Central Office, Technoparkstrasse 1, CH – 8005 Zürich, Switzerland. Email: office@efort.org