| Literature DB >> 32397355 |
Larisa Anghel1,2, Radu Sascău1,2, Anca Trifan1,3, Ioana Mădălina Zota1,2, Cristian Stătescu1,2.
Abstract
In the present study, we aimed to provide evidence from high-quality real world studies for a comprehensive and rigorous analysis on the gastrointestinal bleeding (GIB) risk for non-vitamin K antagonist oral anticoagulants (NOACs). We performed a systematic search of MEDLINE, EMBASE and PUBMED, and of 286 records screened, we included data from 11 high-quality real-world studies, coordinated by independent research groups over the last 3 years, that reported major GIB events in patients given NOACs or vitamin K antagonists for patients with nonvalvular atrial fibrillation. The lowest risk of gastrointestinal bleeding was with apixaban compared with warfarin (hazard ratio (HR) for GIB for apixaban ranging between 0.45 (95% confidence interval (CI) 0.34 to 0.59) and 1.13 (95% CI 0.79 to 1.63)). Apixaban was associated with a lower risk of GI bleeding than dabigatran ((HR ranging between 0.39 (95% CI 0.27 to 0.58) and 0.95 (95% CI 0.65 to 1.18)) or rivaroxaban ((HR ranging between 0.33 (95% CI 0.22 to 0.49) and 0.82 (95% CI 0.62 to 1.08)). The results of our study confirm a low or a similar risk for major GIB between patients receiving apixaban or dabigatran compared with warfarin, and apixaban appears to be associated with the lowest risk of GIB.Entities:
Keywords: gastrointestinal bleeding; non-vitamin K antagonist oral anticoagulants; real-world studies; safety profile
Year: 2020 PMID: 32397355 PMCID: PMC7290290 DOI: 10.3390/jcm9051398
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Med ISSN: 2077-0383 Impact factor: 4.241
Indications and dosing of NOACs in Europe.
| Indication | Dabigatran | Apixaban | Rivaroxaban |
|---|---|---|---|
| Non-valvular atrial fibrillation | 150 mg b.i.d | 5 mg b.i.d | 20 mg daily |
| 110 mg b.i.d if age ≥ 80 years (may consider 110 mg b.i.d also if increased risk of bleeding) | 2.5 mg b.i.d if CrCl 15–29 mL/min OR two out of the following: | - | |
| Avoid if CrCl < 30 mL/min | Avoid if CrCl < 15 mL/min | Avoid if CrCl < 15 mL/min | |
| Treatment and prevention of recurrent | 150 mg b.i.d after 5 days of initial therapy with a parenteral anticoagulant | 10 mg b.i.d for 1 week, then 5 mg b.i.d | 15 mg b.i.d for 3 weeks, then 20 mg daily |
| 110 mg b.i.d after 5 days of initial therapy with a parenteral anticoagulant if age ≥ 80 years (may consider 110 mg b.i.d also if increased risk of bleeding) | - | - | |
| Avoid if CrCl < 30 mL/min | Avoid if CrCl < 15 mL/min | Avoid if CrCl < 15 mL/min |
NOACs: non-vitamin K antagonist oral anticoagulants; CrCl: Creatinine clearance; BW: Body weight; Cr: Creatinine; b.i.d: Twice a day.
Factors associated with NOACs-related gastrointestinal bleeding.
|
|
| 1. Higher dose of dabigatran: a dose of 150 mg b.i.d |
|
|
| Gastroprotective agents: proton pump inhibitors or histamine H2-receptor antagonists |
HAS-BLED: a scoring system developed to assess 1-year risk of major bleeding in patients taking anticoagulants with atrial fibrillation. The score is between 0 and 9, based on seven parameters: hypertension, abnormal renal/liver function (1 point each), stroke, bleeding history or predisposition, labile INR, elderly (>65 years), drug/alcohol concomitantly (1 point each).
Figure 1Flow chart with the process of article selection.
Real-world studies that analyzed NOACs-related gastrointestinal bleeding.
| Study | Country | Obser-Vation Period | Oral Anticoagu-Lants Analyzed | Methodology | Population | Endpoint |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Abraham et al. [ | USA | October 2010 to February 2015 | Apixaban, dabigatran or rivaroxaban | Retrospective cohort study based on medical and pharmacy claims data from OptumLabs Data Warehouse using PSM | 43,303 adults diagnosed with NVAF who had an indexprescription for apixaban, dabigatran, or rivaroxaban | Bleeding |
| Adeboyeje et al. [ | USA | November 2010 to February 2015 | Apixaban, dabigatran, rivaroxaban, warfarin | Retrospective cohort study based on data from a commercially insured population in the U.S. | 44,057 patients diagnosed with NAVF, who used warfarin (23,431), dabigatran (8539), apixaban (3689) and rivaroxaban (8398) | Bleeding |
| Andersson et al. [ | Denmark | July 2013 to March 2016 | Apixaban, dabigatran or rivaroxaban | Retrospective cohort study based on nationwide registers | 12,638 NVAF patients, propensity scores in a 1:1 ration comparing (apixaban vs. dabigatran = 6470; apixaban vs. rivaroxaban = 7352; rivaroxaban vs. dabigatran = 5440 patients) | Effective-ness + bleeding |
| Forslund et al. [ | Sweden | January 2012 to December 2015 | Apixaban, dabigatran, rivaroxaban, warfarin | Population-based retrospective cohort study based on data from the Stockholm Region administrative health data register containing healthcare utilization and prescription data | 22,198 adults with NVAF who were naive for either warfarin or one of the following NOACs: apixaban, dabigatran, or rivaroxaban during the study period. | Effective-ness + bleeding |
| Graham et al. [ | USA | October 2010 to September 2015 | Apixaban, dabigatran, rivaroxaban, warfarin | Retrospective new-users cohort study based on data from Medicare beneficiaries | 183,318 warfarin, 86,198 dabigatran, 106,389 rivaroxaban and 73,039 apixaban users | Effective-ness + bleeding |
| Hernandez et al. [ | USA | January 2013 to December 2014 | Apixaban, dabigatran, rivaroxaban, warfarin | Retrospective database analysis from a random sample of Medicare beneficiaries | 41,366 adults with NVAF who were naive for either warfarin or one of the following NOACs: apixaban, dabigatran or rivaroxaban during the study period. | Effective-ness + bleeding |
| Larsen et al. [ | Denmark | August 2011 to October 2015 | Warfarin, apixaban, dabigatran, rivaroxaban | Retrospective database analysis using propensity score weighting (inverse probability of treatment weighting) | 61,678 NVAF patients, naive to OAC, first time on DOAC or warfarin | Effective-ness + bleeding |
| Nielsen et al. [ | Denmark | August 2011 to February 2016 | Warfarin, apixaban, dabigatran, rivaroxaban | Retrospective analysis using propensity score weighting (inverse probability of treatment weighting) | 55,644 NVAF patients, naïve to OAC, first time on DOAC or warfarin, all restricted to reduced dose | Effective-ness + bleeding |
| Noseworthy et al. [ | USA | October 2010 to June 2015 | Rivaroxaban, dabigatran, apixaban | Retrospective analysis using administrative claims, using PSM and Cox proportional hazards regression | 57,788 NVAF patients, including patients with prior warfarin exposure. Apixaban used as reference category | Effective-ness + bleeding |
| Vinogradova et al. [ | UK | January 2011 to October 2016 | Warfarin, apixaban, dabigatran, rivaroxaban | Prospective open cohort study using two primary care databases representative of the national population | 132,231 warfarin, 7744 dabigatran, 37,863 rivaroxaban and 18,223 apixaban users, subgrouped into 103,270 patients with atrial fibrillation and 92,791 without atrial fibrillation | Bleeding |
| Yao et al. [ | USA | October 2010 to | Warfarin, apixaban, dabigatran, rivaroxaban | Retrospective database analyses using PSM | 125,243 NVAF patients, three 1:1 PSM cohorts (apixaban = 15,390; dabigatran = 28,614; rivaroxaban = 32,350) | Effective-ness + bleeding |
NOACs: non-vitamin K antagonist oral anticoagulants; NVAF: nonvalvular atrial fibrillation; OAC: oral anticoagulant; DOAC: direct oral anticoagulant; PSM: propensity score matching.
Baseline characteristics of patients included in the studies.
| Dabigatran | Rivaroxaban | Apixaban | Warfarin | Maximum | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||||
| Age group (mean) | 68.8 (11.4) | 70.6 (11.4) | 72.3 (11.1) | NA | - |
| Male | 60.5% | 57.1% | 54% | NA | - |
| CHA2DS2-VASC (mean) | 3.6 (1.9) | 3.8 (1.9) | 4.0 (1.9) | NA | - |
| HAS-BLED (mean) | 2.2 (1.2) | 2.4 (1.2) | 2.4 (1.2) | NA | - |
| Antiplatelet or non-steroidal | 10.7% | 12.1% | 12.3% | NA | - |
|
| |||||
| Age group (mean) | 70 (12.3) | 70 (12.3) | 70 (12.6) | 70 (12.2) | 0.01 |
| Male | 58.9% | 58.7% | 59.5% | 59.1% | 0.01 |
| CHA2DS2-VASC (mean) | 3.3 (1.9) | 3.3 (1.9) | 3.3 (1.9) | 3.3 (1.8) | 0.01 |
| HAS-BLED (mean) | 2.1 (1.4) | 2.1 (1.4) | 2.1 (1.4) | 2.1 (1.4) | 0.01 |
| Antiplatelet or non-steroidal | 19.9% | 20.5% | 20.2% | 20.2% | 0.01 |
|
| |||||
| Age group (mean) | 65.7 (7.3) | 72.0 (9.8) | 71.9 (9.1) | NA | - |
| Male | 64% | 56% | 63% | NA | - |
| CHA2DS2-VASC | - | - | - | NA | - |
| HAS-BLED | - | - | - | NA | - |
| Antiplatelet or non-steroidal | 59.8% | 61.8% | 57.8% | NA | - |
|
| |||||
| Age group (mean) | 69.9 (11.3) | 74.0 (10.3) | 75.0 (10.8) | 74.1 (11.0) | - |
| Male | 60% | 54.6% | 54.6% | 55.4% | - |
| CHA2DS2-VASC (mean) | 3. 01 (1.89) | 3.59 (1.88) | 3.69 (1.9) | 3.68 (1.91) | - |
| HAS-BLED | - | - | - | - | - |
| Antiplatelet drugs | 46.73% | 55.74% | 47.73% | 54.96% | - |
|
| |||||
| Age group (mean) | 75.5 | 74.9 | 75.2 | 75.8 | 0.15 |
| Male | 52.4% | 53.9% | 52.2% | 52% | 0.04 |
| CHA2DS2-VASC (≥2) | 96.7% | 96.6% | 97.4% | 97.1% | 0.04 |
| HAS-BLED (≥3) | 44.7% | 43.7% | 47.8% | 45.8% | 0.03 |
| Antiplatelet or non-steroidal | 28.3% | 28.2% | 29.5% | 27.2% | 0.04 |
|
| |||||
| Age group (mean) | 74.9 (8.7) | 76.4 (8.6) | 77.4 (8.6) | 76.0 (10.3) | <0.001 |
| Male | 47.0% | 43.7% | 42.5% | 43.1% | <0.001 |
| CHA2DS2-VASC (mean) | 4.26 (1.74) | 4.55 (1.78) | 4.68 (1.73) | 4.8 (1.82) | <0.001 |
| HAS-BLED (mean) | 3.49 (0.93) | 3.65 (0.95) | 3.71 (0.93) | 3.71 (1.0) | <0.001 |
| Antiplatelet or non-steroidal | 22.5% | 25.2% | 25.0% | 21.3% | <0.001 |
|
| |||||
| Age group (mean) | 67.6 (5.6) | 71.8 (7.1) | 71.3 (5.9) | 72.4 (7.4) | 0.02 |
| Male | 66.1% | 57.9% | 60.3% | 58.8% | 0.02 |
| CHA2DS2-VASC (mean) | 2.2 (1.4) | 2.8 (1.6) | 2.8 (1.6) | 2.8 (1.7) | 0.02 |
| HAS-BLED (mean) | 2.0 (1.1) | 2.2 (1.2) | 2.3 (1.2) | 2.2 (1.2) | 0.01 |
| Aspirin or non-steroidal | 62.7% | 60.4% | 60.2% | 66.3% | 0.01 |
|
| |||||
| Age group (mean) | 79.9 (9.0) | 77.9 (13.5) | 83.9 (8.2) | 71.0 (12.6) | 0.09 |
| Male | 46.3% | 46.8% | 39.4% | 59.6% | 0.03 |
| CHA2DS2-VASC (mean) | 3.8 (1.5) | 3.6 (1.8) | 4.3 (1.5) | 3.0 (1.7) | 0.04 |
| HAS-BLED (mean) | 2.7 (1.0) | 2.5 (1.2) | 2.8 (1.1) | 2.4 (1.2) | 0.06 |
| Aspirin or non-steroidal | 74.8% | 66.2% | 66.7% | 70.2% | 0.03 |
|
| |||||
| Age group (median) | 71 (62–78) | 73 (65–81) | 73 (65–81) | NA | - |
| Male | 58.9% | 54.4% | 54.1% | NA | - |
| CHA2DS2-VASC (median) | 4 (2–5) | 4 (3–5) | 4 (3–5) | NA | - |
| HAS-BLED (median) | 2 (1–3) | 2 (2–3) | 2 (2–3) | NA | - |
| Antiplatelet or non-steroidal | 11.1% | 11.7% | 12.2% | NA | - |
|
| |||||
| Age group (mean) | 74.5 (10.7) | 75.8 (10.8) | 76.5 (10.9) | 74.8 (10.4) | - |
| Male | 59.5% | 54.3% | 53.4% | 55.6% | - |
| CHA2DS2-VASC | - | - | - | - | - |
| HAS-BLED | - | - | - | - | - |
| Antiplatelet or non-steroidal | 39.6% | 32.3% | 31.3% | 41.8% | - |
|
| |||||
| Age group (median) | 70 (62–78) | 72 (64–80) | 73 (66–81) | 73 (66–81) | - |
| Male | 61.3% | 57.8% | 53.1% | 53.2% | - |
| CHA2DS2-VASC (median) | 3 (2–5) | 4 (2–5) | 4 (3–5) | 4 (3–5) | - |
| HAS-BLED (median) | 2 (1–3) | 2 (2–3) | 2 (2–3) | 2 (2–3) | - |
| Antiplatelet or non-steroidal | 10.3% | 11.6% | 12.1% | 12.5% | - |
SMD—standardized mean difference; CHA2DS2-VASC score—assigns points for the presence of congestive heart failure, hypertension, age 65–74 years and age ≥75 years, diabetes mellitus, stroke or transient ischemic attack, vascular disease, and female sex; HAS-BLED score—assigns points for the presence of hypertension, abnormal renal or liver function, stroke, bleeding history, labile INR, age ≥65 years, and antiplatelet drug or alcohol use; NA—not applicable.
Adjusted hazard ratios with 95% confidence intervals from comparisons of each NOAC versus warfarin for major gastrointestinal bleeding.
| Study | Dabigatran vs. Warfarin | Rivaroxaban vs. Warfarin | Apixaban vs. Warfarin |
|---|---|---|---|
| Forslund et al. [ | 1.43 (1.07–1.9) | 1.28 (0.90–1.80) | 1.13 (0.79–1.63) |
| Larsen et al. [ | 0.58 (0.47–0.71) | 1.06 (0.91–1.23) | 0.61 (0.49–0.75) |
| Nielsen et al. [ | 0.87 (0.75–1.01) | 1.17 (0.94–1.45) | 1.04 (0.76–1.43) |
| Vinogradova et al. [ | 1.08 (0.83–1.41) | 1.21 (1.01–1.45) | 0.76 (0.58–0.99) |
| Yao et al. [ | 0.79 (0.67–0.94) | 1.04 (0.90–1.20) | 0.45 (0.34–0.59) |
| Graham et al. [ | 1.04 (0.9–1.21) | 1.38 (1.12–1.54) | 0.51 (0.42–0.61) |
| Adeboyeje et al. [ | 1.17 (1.04–1.32) | 1.00 (0.87–1.16) | 0.82 (0.63–1.06) |
| Hernandez et al. [ | 0.95 (0.75–1.19) | 1.35 (1.20–1.52) | 0.72 (0.57–0.90) |
Adjusted hazard ratios with 95% confidence intervals from direct pairwise comparison of different NOACs for major gastrointestinal bleeding.
| Study | Rivaroxaban vs. Dabigatran | Apixaban vs. Dabigatran | Apixaban vs. Rivaroxaban |
|---|---|---|---|
| Andersson et al. [ | 1.35 (0.91–2.00) | 0.94 (0.62–1.41) | 0.88 (0.64–1.22) |
| Abraham et al. [ | 1.20 (1.00–1.45) | 0.39 (0.27–0.58) | 0.33 (0.22–0.49) |
| Noseworthy et al. [ | 1.30 (1.10–1.53) | 0.50 (0.36–0.70) | 0.39 (0.28–0.54) |
| Graham et al. [ | 1.32 (1.21–1.45) | 0.56 (0.32–0.74) | 0.38 (0.27–0.59) |
| Adeboyeje et al. [ | 1.15 (0.99–1.36) | 0.95 (0.65–1.18) | 0.82 (0.62–1.08) |
| Hernandez et al. [ | 1.25 (1.06–1.39) | 0.76 (0.56–1.03) | 0.53 (0.42–0.68) |