| Literature DB >> 32285340 |
Stefano Ballestri1, Mariano Capitelli2, Maria Cristina Fontana2, Dimitriy Arioli3, Elisa Romagnoli3, Catia Graziosi2, Amedeo Lonardo4, Marco Marietta5, Francesco Dentali6, Giorgio Cioni2.
Abstract
Atrial fibrillation (AF) and venous thromboembolism (VTE) are highly prevalent and relevant healthcare issues. Direct oral anticoagulants (DOACs) are now the first-choice for anticoagulant treatment of these conditions displaying a better efficacy/safety profile than vitamin-K antagonists, mainly due to significantly reduced risk of major bleeding, especially of intracranial haemorrhage. Nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) is the most common liver disease in developed countries showing a continuously growing prevalence. Nonalcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH), its evolutive form, will be the leading cause for liver transplantation by 2020. NAFLD is independently associated with an increased risk of abnormalities of cardiac structure and function, including cardiac rhythm disorders (mainly AF). Moreover, data suggest an increased risk of unprovoked VTE associated with NAFLD/NASH. Therefore, a growing number of patients with chronic liver disease (CLD) will be candidate for anticoagulant therapy in the near future. Cirrhosis of any etiology is characterized by an unstable thrombosis/bleeding haemostatic balance, making anticoagulant therapy particularly challenging in this condition. Given that patients with significant active liver disease and cirrhosis were excluded from all pivotal randomized controlled trials on DOACs, this comprehensive review aims at critically discussing real-world evidence, including the latest population studies, regarding the use of DOACs in patients with CLD/cirrhosis.Entities:
Keywords: Atrial fibrillation; Cardiovascular disease; Cirrhosis; Direct oral anticoagulants; Fatty liver; Heparin; Liver disease; Stroke; Thrombosis; Warfarin
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32285340 PMCID: PMC7467481 DOI: 10.1007/s12325-020-01307-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Adv Ther ISSN: 0741-238X Impact factor: 3.845
Fig. 1Balance between thrombosis and bleeding in liver disease. ADAMTS13 ADAM metallopeptidase with thrombospondin type 1 motif 13, PAI plasminogen activator inhibitor, TAFI thrombin-activatable fibrinolysis inhibitor, TFPI tissue factor pathway inhibitor
Studies evaluating DOACs vs traditional anticoagulants in patients with CLD
| Author (reference) | Population characteristics | AC Indication study/ctrl, | Age study/ctrl | CTP study/ctrl, % | Varices study/ctrl, | DOACs type | DOACs dose | AC duration study/ctrl | Efficacy outcomes study vs ctrl, | Safety outcomes study vs ctrl, |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Intagliata [ | USA, retrospective cohort, 39 cirrhotic pts (DOACs 20, warfarin/LMWH 13/6) | AF 4/1 VTE 4/12 SpVT 12/6 | Mean (range) 57 (50–64)/60 (55–64) | A: 45/47 B: 55/53 C: 0/0 | 10 (50)/7 (41) | Apixaban 55% Rivaroxaban 45% | 2.5 or 5 mg BID 10 or 20 mg OD | Mean 267/478 days | NA | Any bleeding rate: 20% vs 16% (ns) Major bleeding rate: 5% vs 11% (ns) |
| Kunk [ | USA, retrospective cohort, 69 cirrhotic pts (DOACs only) | AF 22 PVT/DVT 47 | Median (range) 73 (44–92) | A: 48 B: 38 C: 14 | 36 (52) | Apixaban 54% Rivaroxaban 36% Dabigatran 10% | NA | 6 months | AF: none developed clot VTE: 81% resolution, 13% unchanged, 6% progression | Any bleeding rate: 16 (23) Major bleeding rate: 8 (12) |
| Hum [ | USA, retrospective cohort, 45 cirrhotic pts (DOACs 27, warfarin/LMWH 15/3) | AF 15/9 DVT 12/8 PVT 4/3 | Mean (range) 61 (26–90)/58 (34–80) | A: 41/39 B: 44/50 C: 15/11 | 4 (15)/2 (11) | Rivaroxaban 63% Apixaban 47% | 15 mg OD ± 20 mg load 5 mg BID ± 10 mg load | Median 225/317 days | Failed efficacy: 1 (6) vs 1 (4) ( | Any bleeding rate: 8 (30) vs 10 (56) ( Major bleeding rate: 1 (4) vs 5 (28) ( |
| De Gottardi [ | Europe, retrospective cohort, 36 cirrhotic pts vs 58 non-cirrhotic ctrls (all DOACs only) | SpVT 27/42 DVT 4/0 AF 5/12 Other 0/6 | Median (range) 49.5 (16–82)/64.9 (32–82) | Median (range) 6 (5–8) | 23 (64)/24 (41) | Rivaroxaban 83% Apixaban 11% Dabigatran 5% | 5 to 20 mg TDD 2.5 to 10 mg TDD 110 to 220 mg TDD | Mean 9.6/13.1 months | NA | All bleeding rate: 5 (14) vs 9 (15.5) Major bleeding rate: 1 (3) vs 2 (3.5) |
| Goriacko [ | USA, retrospective cohort, 233 CLD pts (DOACs 75, warfarin 158) | AF 75/158 | Median (IQR) 66 (61, 75)/65 (59, 73) | A: 64/35 B: 35/59 C: 1/6 | 1 (1.3)/11 (7) | Dabigatran 47% Rivaroxaban 39% Apixaban 15% | NA | NA | NA | Any bleeding rate: 8.4% vs 8.8% per year (ns) Major bleeding rate: 3.3% vs 3.9% per year (ns) |
| Nagaoki [ | Japan, retrospective cohort, 50 cirrhotic pts (DOACs 20, warfarin 30; INR target 1.5–2) | PVT 20/30 | 9 (53–74)/67 (24–83) | A: 75/50 B: 25/33 C: 0/17 | 16 (80)/26 (87) | Edoxaban 100% | 60 mg (20%) or 30 mg (80%) OD | 6/6 months | PVT resolution: 14 (70) vs 6 (20) PVT progression: 1 (5) vs 14 (47) | Any bleeding rate: NA Major bleeding rate: 3 (15) vs 2 (7) (ns) |
| Pastori [ | Italy, retrospective cohort, 129 pts with advanced liver fibrosis (i.e. FIB-4 > 3.25) (DOACs 52, VKAs 77); 2201 ctrls (DOACs 981, VKAs 1220) | FIB-4 > 3.25:AF 52/77 FIB-4 < 3.25:AF 981/1220 | Mean ± SD 74.4 ± 9.3/78.9 ± 7.5 | NA | NA | Apixaban 35% Rivaroxaban 35% Dabigatran 27% Edoxaban 3% (pts + ctrls n.1033) | Standard | NA | FIB-4 not significantly associated with CV events neither in DOACs or VKAs pts at MVA | FIB-4 associated with major bleedings only in VKAs pts (HR: 3.075, |
| Hanafy [ | Egypt, RCT, 80 HCV-related cirrhotic CTP A-B pts (DOACs 40, warfarin 40) | Acute PVT 40/40 | Mean ± SD 46 ± 5/41 ± 2 | A: NA B: NA C: 0 | Grade ≥ 2: 27(68)/29 (73) | Rivaroxaban 100% | 10 mg every 12 h | NA | PVT resolution: 85% vs 45%. Short-term survival rate: 20.4 ± 2.2 vs 10.6 ± 1.8 months | GI bleeding: 0 (0) vs 17 (43.3) |
| Davis [ | USA, retrospective cohort, 109 CLD pts (DOACs 27, warfarin 82) | DVT 9/41 PE 10/21 PVT 8/20 | Median (IQR) 60 (53–62)/55 (50–64) | A: 41/22 B: 59/60 C: 0/18 | 3 (11)/17 (21) | Apixaban 44.5% Rivaroxaban 44.5% Dabigatran 11% | NA | NA | Recurrent VTE: 3 (11) vs 10 (12) at 3 months (ns) | Major bleeding rate: 2 (7.4) vs 7 (13.4) (ns) Admission for non-major one: 1 (3.7) vs 5 (6.1) (ns) |
| Davis [ | USA, retrospective cohort, 167 cirrhotic pts (DOACs 57, warfarin 110) | DVT 10/32 PE 9/18 PVT 3/19 AF 23/28 Other 10/24 | Median (IQR) 63 (58–72)/59 (52–67) | A: 61.4/39.1 B: 19.3/48.2 C: 5.3/6.4 | 7 (12)/28 (26) | Apixaban 52.6% Rivaroxaban 45.6% Dabigatran 1.8% | NA | NA | Stroke and recurrent embolism at 90 days: 1 (1.8) vs 0 (0) and 1 (1.8) vs 2 (1.8) (both ns) | Major bleeding rate at 90 days: 3 (5.2) vs 10 (9.1) (ns) |
| Wang [ | Taiwan, population retrospective cohort, 633 pts with ILF (DOACs 342, warfarin 394) | AF 342/394 | Mean ± SD 77 ± 36.9 all | NA | NA | Rivaroxaban 51% Dabigatran 28% Apixaban 19% Edoxaban 2% | NA | NA | No difference in IS or SE risk. Lower risk of death (aHR 0.64, 0.49–0.83) | No difference in major or GI bleeding |
| Lee [ | Korea, population retrospective cohort, 4942 patients with significant active LD (DOACs 3115, warfarin 1827) from 37,353 total population | AF 3,115/1,827 | Mean ± SD 67.9 ± 10.2/68.1 ± 10.8 | NA | NA | Rivaroxaban 43% Dabigatran 27% Apixaban 23% Edoxaban 7% (total population) | 51% reduced dose | F-up 15 months | Reduced risk of IS (HR 0.445, 0.312–0.636) and composite outcomea (HR 0.691, 0.577–0.827) | Lower risk of ICH (HR 0.424, 0.241–0.723), hospitalization for major bleeding (HR 0.622, 0.442–0.870) |
| Lee [ | Taiwan, population retrospective cohort, 2428 cirrhotic pts (DOACs 1438, warfarin 990) | AF 1,438/990 | Mean ± SD 72.8 ± 11.1/72.4 ± 11.2 | NA | NA | Rivaroxaban 51% Dabigatran 37% Apixaban 12% | 95% 10–15 mg OD 89% 110 mg BID 69% 2.5 mg BID | Mean F-up 1.13/1.30 years | Comparable risk of IS/SE | Lower risk of GI (HR 0.51, 0.32–0.79) and all (HR 0.51, 0.32–0.74) major bleeding. Comparable risk of ICH |
aSix items (ischemic stroke, intracranial hemorrhage, gastrointestinal bleeding, major bleeding, all-cause death). International Society on Thrombosis and Haemostasis (ISTH) definition was largely adopted for major bleeding in the reported studies
AC anticoagulation, AF atrial fibrillation, aHR adjusted hazard ratio, BID bis in die, CLD chronic liver disease, CTP Child-Turcotte-Pugh, ctrl control, CV cardiovascular, DOACs direct oral anticoagulants, DVT deep vein thrombosis, F-up follow-up, GI gastrointestinal, HCV hepatitis C virus, HR hazard ratio, ILF impaired liver function, INR international normalized ratio, IQR interquartile range, IS ischemic stroke, LWMH low-molecular weight heparin, MVA multivariate analysis, NA not available, ns not statistically significant, OD once daily, PE acute pulmonary embolism, pts patients, PVTportal vein thrombosis, RCT randomized controlled trial, SD standard deviation, SE systemic embolism, SpVT splanchnic vein thrombosis, TDD total daily dose, VTE venous thromboembolism, VKAs vitamin K antagonists
Fig. 2Management of anticoagulation in patient with CLD/cirrhosis. a DOACs initiation. AC anticoagulation, CTP Child Turcotte-Pugh, DOACs direct oral anticoagulants, EGD esophagogastroduodenoscopy, EVL endoscopic variceal ligation, INR international normalized ratio, NSBBs non-selective beta-blockers, RWS red wale signs. *can be used. b Management of bleeding complications. DOACs direct oral anticoagulants, EVL endoscopic variceal ligation, HRS hepatorenal syndrome, 4F-PCC four factor-prothrombin complex concentrate, RBC red blood cells, TIPS transjugular intrahepatic portosystemic shunt
| Nonalcoholic fatty liver disease/nonalcoholic steatohepatitis (NAFLD/NASH), a globally epidemic condition, is independently associated with an increased risk of atrial fibrillation (AF) and unprovoked venous thromboembolism (VTE). Therefore, a growing mole of patients with chronic liver disease (CLD) will be a candidate for anticoagulant therapy in the forthcoming years. |
| Patients with significant active liver disease and cirrhosis have been excluded from all pivotal randomized controlled trials (RCTs) on direct oral anticoagulants (DOACs). |
| Anticoagulant therapy is challenging in cirrhotic patients, who exhibit an unstable balance hemostatic between thrombosis and bleeding. |
| Accumulating real world data suggest that, compared to warfarin, DOACs have similar efficacy and reduced bleeding complications in cirrhotic patients with AF or VTE. |
| RCTs evaluating efficacy, safety and possible dose adaptation rules in patients with cirrhosis are needed. |