| Literature DB >> 23809871 |
Wolfgang Mueck1, Stephan Schwers, Jan Stampfuss.
Abstract
Unlike traditional anticoagulants, the more recently developed agents rivaroxaban, dabigatran and apixaban target specific factors in the coagulation cascade to attenuate thrombosis. Rivaroxaban and apixaban directly inhibit Factor Xa, whereas dabigatran directly inhibits thrombin. All three drugs exhibit predictable pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic characteristics that allow for fixed oral doses in a variety of settings. The population pharmacokinetics of rivaroxaban, and also dabigatran, have been evaluated in a series of models using patient data from phase II and III clinical studies. These models point towards a consistent pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic profile, even when extreme demographic factors are taken into account, meaning that doses rarely need to be adjusted. The exception is in certain patients with renal impairment, for whom pharmacokinetic modelling provided the rationale for reduced doses as part of some regimens. Although not routinely required, the ability to measure plasma concentrations of these agents could be advantageous in emergency situations, such as overdose. Specific pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic characteristics must be taken into account when selecting an appropriate assay for monitoring. The anti-Factor Xa chromogenic assays now available are likely to provide the most appropriate means of determining plasma concentrations of rivaroxaban and apixaban, and specific assays for dabigatran are in development.Entities:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23809871 PMCID: PMC3726366 DOI: 10.1186/1477-9560-11-10
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Thromb J ISSN: 1477-9560
Figure 1The coagulation cascade and targets of anticoagulant agents. LMWH, low molecular weight heparin; TF, tissue factor; UFH, unfractionated heparin; VKA, vitamin K antagonist [9].
Pharmacokinetic parameters (median values) of rivaroxaban, apixaban and dabigatran in healthy adults
| Rivaroxaban | 80–100 [ | 141* [ | 1020* [ | 2–4 [ | 5–13 [ | 50 [ | 10 [ | 92–95 [ | 33 [ |
| Apixaban | 50 [ | 460†[ | 4100†[ | 3–4 [ | 12 [ | 21 [ | 3 [ | 87 [ | 27 [ |
| Dabigatran | 6.5 [ | 110‡[ | 900‡[ | 1–2 [ | 12–17 [ | 60–70 [ | 105–170 [ | 34–35 [ | 85 [ |
*With 10 mg oral dose.
†With 20 mg oral dose.
‡With 150 mg oral dose.
Values rounded to nearest integer.
AUC area under the concentration–time curve, CL/F apparent clearance, C maximum plasma concentration, F absolute bioavailability, t time to maximum concentration, t apparent half-life, V volume of distribution at steady state.
Concentration–time profiles for rivaroxaban in different patient populations observed in clinical studies [Bayer HealthCare Pharmaceuticals and Janssen Research & Development, LLC; data on file]
| 1 | 111 (75.1–177) | 235 (164–361) | 216 (152–316) | 189 (134–281) | 41.3 (23.5–65.9) |
| 2 | 122 (90.6–195) | 270 (189–419) | 250 (177–361) | 219 (157–317) | 44.1 (26.7–69.5) |
| 3 | 114 (82.3–186) | 259 (180–405) | 246 (172–361) | 216 (153–317) | 42.0 (25.9–66.4) |
| 4 | 102 (75.8–164) | 237 (161–369) | 232 (157–349) | 205 (141–309) | 38.7 (23.3–63.3) |
| 5 | 90.7 (62.2–143) | 213 (145–339) | 215 (140–333) | 191 (127–297) | 35.2 (20.2–59.1) |
| 6 | 80.2 (51.8–125) | 191 (123–311) | 198 (123–318) | 177 (111–286) | 31.7 (17.4–55.5) |
| 9 | 55.2 (30.5–96.0) | 137 (71.3–240) | 155 (81.9–276) | 141 (74.9–254) | 22.8 (10.4–45.2) |
| 12 | 37.8 (15.2–76.1) | 97.8 (42.9–190) | 121 (53.4–242) | 112 (50.0–225) | 16.2 (6.11–36.6) |
| 18 | 17.9 (4.85–49.9) | 50.0 (16.0–124) | 73.5 (22.0–187) | 70.4 (21.9–180) | − |
| 24 | 8.54 (1.36–37.2) | 25.6 (5.93–86.9) | 44.7 (9.02–147) | 44.4 (9.42–143) | − |
Plasma concentrations given as geometric mean values with 90% prediction intervals (5/95 percentiles). Values given to 3 significant figures.
ACS acute coronary syndrome, AF atrial fibrillation, bid twice daily, CrCl creatinine clearance, CV cardiovascular, DVT deep vein thrombosis, od once daily, VTE venous thromboembolism.
Comparison of selected pharmacokinetic parameters (median values) with rivaroxaban in specific patient populations
| Hip surgery patients, 2.5–10 mg bid; 10 mg od | 125* [ | 9* [ | 1170†[ | 58 [ | 32 [ | 5–8 [ | 38 [ |
| Patients treated for DVT; 10 mg bid, 20 and 30 mg od or bid, or 40 mg od | 270 [ | 25‡[ | 2870 [ | 54 [ | 29 [ | 6 [ | 40 [ |
| Patients with AF; 15 and 20 mg od | 257‡ [Girgis. Unpublished data] | 32 [ | 3466† [Girgis. Unpublished data] | 80 [Girgis. Unpublished data] | 18 [Girgis. Unpublished data] | 6 [Girgis. Unpublished data] | 35 [Girgis. Unpublished data] |
| Patients with ACS; 2.5 mg bid | 44§[ | 16§[ | 361§[ | 58 [ | 10 [ | 6.5 [ | 31 [ |
*10 mg od.
†AUC over a 24-hour period at steady-state.
‡20 mg od at steady-state.
§2.5 mg bid at steady-state; AUC over a 12-hour period.
Values rounded to nearest integer.
AF atrial fibrillation, AUC area under the concentration–time curve, bid twice daily, C maximum plasma concentration, C steady-state trough concentration, CL/F apparent clearance, CV coefficient of variance, DVT deep vein thrombosis, NR not reported, od once daily, V/F volume of distribution at steady state.
Figure 2Simulations of rivaroxaban plasma concentration–time profiles in typical patients compared with overall population estimates. Typical patients are elderly (90 years), have moderate to severe renal impairment; CrCl 30 ml/min), have low body weight (40 kg), or are elderly with low body weight. Patients receiving rivaroxaban 10 mg once daily (mean with 90% interval) [11]. CrCL/CrCl, creatinine clearance. Reproduced with permission from Mueck W, Borris LC, Dahl OE et al. Population pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of once- and twice-daily rivaroxaban for the prevention of venous thromboembolism in patients undergoing total hip replacement. Thromb Haemost 2008;100:453–461.
Figure 3Predicted plasma rivaroxaban concentration–time profiles for extremes in age, renal function and body weight. Patients receiving rivaroxaban 20 mg once daily. The simulated patients had typical mean characteristics (age 60 years, body weight 80 kg, CrCl 90 ml/min) unless specified otherwise [12]. CLCR/CrCl, creatinine clearance. Reproduced from Mueck W, Lensing AW, Agnelli G et al. Rivaroxaban: population pharmacokinetic analyses in patients treated for acute deep-vein thrombosis and exposure simulations in patients with atrial fibrillation treated for stroke prevention. Clin Pharmacokinet 2011; 50:675–686 with permission from Adis (© Springer International Publishing AG 2011. All rights reserved).
Figure 4Simulated venous thromboembolism treatment dosing regimen of rivaroxaban. Regimen is 15 mg bid for 3 weeks followed by 20 mg od (n=870) [12]. bid, twice daily; od, once daily. Reproduced from Mueck W, Lensing AW, Agnelli G et al. Rivaroxaban: population pharmacokinetic analyses in patients treated for acute deep-vein thrombosis and exposure simulations in patients with atrial fibrillation treated for stroke prevention. Clin Pharmacokinet 2011; 50:675–686 with permission from Adis (© Springer International Publishing AG 2011. All rights reserved).
Comparison and suitability of laboratory assays for monitoring novel oral anticoagulants [[89],[90]]
| Rivaroxaban | Dose-dependent prolongation but results vary with thromboplastin reagent | Results vary as for PT | Not as sensitive as PT | NA | Dose-dependent response with short incubation time | Sensitive if incubation avoided and human Factor Xa used | Dose-dependent response with human Factor Xa and buffer | Factor Xa chromogenic assay (with appropriate calibration) | PT (Neoplastin) |
| Apixaban | Prolongs PT but results may vary with thromboplastin reagent | More sensitive than PT | Other tests may be more sensitive | NA | Dose-dependent response and more sensitive than PT, dilute PT and aPTT | NR | Dose-dependent response | Rotachrom® Factor Xa chromogenic assay (with appropriate calibration) | Modified PT |
| Dabigatran | Prolongs PT but insensitive and results may vary with thromboplastin reagent | NR | More sensitive than PT but results vary with different reagents | Prolongs ECT in a dose-dependent manner | Prolongs HepTest but may be unsuitable | Prolongs PiCT but insensitive at lower doses | In development | Hemoclot suggested | ECT, aPTT |
aPTT activated partial thromboplastin time, ECT ecarin clotting time, NA not applicable, NR not reported, PiCT prothrombinase-induced clotting time, PT prothrombin time.