Literature DB >> 34119049

Anticoagulation in COVID-19: reaction to the ACTION trial.

Jeffrey S Berger1, Jean Marie Connors2.   

Abstract

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Year:  2021        PMID: 34119049      PMCID: PMC8192086          DOI: 10.1016/S0140-6736(21)01291-5

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Lancet        ISSN: 0140-6736            Impact factor:   79.321


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Early in the COVID-19 pandemic, it became clear that coagulopathy leading to macrovascular and microvascular thrombotic events was a considerable potential complication for patients with COVID-19. Increased inflammation and coagulopathy were independently associated with critical illness and all-cause mortality and had a synergistic role in the pathogenesis of COVID-19. Early observations of a benefit from heparin in a selected cohort of severely ill patients with COVID-19 in China, followed by reports of increased thromboembolic events in patients with COVID-19 (both in and outside of intensive care units [ICUs]) despite the use of standard-dose venous thromboembolism prophylaxis,4, 5 led many physicians to use increased anticoagulant doses, even without robust data available. Autopsy findings, showing widespread pulmonary microvascular thrombosis, suggested that the hypoxaemia and respiratory failure in COVID-19 resulted from microvascular thrombosis.7, 8 A need to further understand these findings and the potential role of anticoagulation in this context prompted new research. Among these studies, three platforms—ACTIV-4a, ATTACC, and REMAP-CAP—joined forces to evaluate therapeutic-dose versus prophylactic-dose heparin in hospitalised patients with COVID-19. In December, 2020, this multiplatform randomised clinical trial paused enrolment into the severe COVID-19 stratum (ie, patients receiving ICU level of care) because of futility, and a month later terminated enrolment into the moderate COVID-19 stratum (ie, hospitalised patients not receiving ICU level of care) for superiority. In patients with moderate disease, regardless of D-dimer concentration, therapeutic anticoagulation decreased the number of days on organ support. These seemingly discrepant results suggested that therapeutic heparin worked best when started early in the disease course, before patients became critically ill. In The Lancet, Renato Lopes and colleagues report the results of the ACTION trial of therapeutic versus prophylactic anticoagulation for patients hospitalised with COVID-19. 615 patients (mean age 56·6 years [SD 14·3]; 368 [60%] men and 247 [40%] women) admitted to hospitals in Brazil with confirmed COVID-19 and elevated D-dimer concentration were randomly assigned to either a therapeutic or a prophylactic anticoagulation strategy. The therapeutic strategy (311 patients) was either therapeutic-dose rivaroxaban (20 mg or 15 mg daily) with extended post-discharge rivaroxaban (20 mg daily) up to 30 days, if clinically stable; or enoxaparin (1 mg/kg twice per day) or unfractionated heparin in hospital, if clinically unstable. 280 (90%) patients in the therapeutic group were given rivaroxaban. The prophylactic anticoagulation strategy (304 patients) consisted of standard-of-care inpatient enoxaparin or unfractionated heparin at a prophylactic dose, and 38 (13%) also received heparin for 30 days post discharge at the treating physician's discretion. The median time from symptom onset to hospital admission was 8·0 days (IQR 6·0–10·0) and from hospital admission to randomisation was 2·0 days (1·0–3·0). 460 (75%) patients required oxygen support and 510 (83%) were receiving systemic corticosteroids at baseline. The primary outcome was a hierarchical analysis of time to death, duration of hospitalisation, or duration of supplemental oxygen use through 30 days, conducted with the win ratio method. This method, a novel approach to the analysis of composite endpoints in clinical trials based on clinical priorities, compares treatment assignment between every patient in both groups to identify a “winner” on the basis of prespecified criteria. This method accounts for relative priorities of the composite endpoint by prioritising fatal outcomes, allowing for enhanced statistical power. The therapeutic anticoagulation group had 34·8% wins, versus 41·3% wins in the prophylactic group (win ratio 0·86 [95% CI 0·59–1·22], p=0·40). Risk of a secondary composite outcome of thromboembolic events was not significantly different in the therapeutic group versus the prophylactic group (relative risk 0·75 [95% CI 0·45–1·26], p=0·32), nor was all-cause death (1·49 [0·90–2·46], p=0·13). However, risk of the primary safety outcome, major or clinically relevant non-major bleeding, was significantly higher (3·64 [1·61–8·27], p=0·0010) in the therapeutic group (26 [8%] of 310 patients) than in the prophylactic group (seven [2%] of 304). The Brazilian investigators from the ACTION trial deserve recognition for conducting this important trial that contributes new information for the management of patients with COVID-19. A strategy of inpatient and post-discharge therapeutic rivaroxaban is not superior to inpatient-only use of prophylactic heparin, highlighting that the choice of drug, dose, and timing of anticoagulant are important. Whether improvements in care, with systemic corticosteroids and antivirals, have mitigated thromboinflammation is also unclear. Similarly, criteria for admission to the hospital might vary from region to region and during different stages of the pandemic, affecting risk of both thrombotic and fatal outcomes. Although the previous multiplatform trial used therapeutic heparin, ACTION used rivaroxaban in 92% of patients in the therapeutic group. Heparin, unlike other anticoagulants, has anti-inflammatory and possibly direct antiviral effects. It is also possible that the 20 mg dose of rivaroxaban is suboptimal in patients hospitalised with the highly coagulopathic thromboinflammation of SARS-CoV-2 infection driving microvascular thrombosis, as 15 mg twice per day is used for acute treatment of venous thromboembolism; however, bleeding was already markedly increased. The additional 30 days of anticoagulation post discharge might be of no benefit and only cause harm in patients with COVID-19 who have cleared the virus and survived to hospital discharge. A dedicated randomised trial is ongoing in the post-discharge population (NCT04650087). The results of ACTION add important information on how best to treat patients with COVID-19. In these primarily stable hospitalised patients, therapeutic dose rivaroxaban in hospital with post-discharge treatment up to 30 days conferred no additional benefit when compared with in-hospital prophylactic-dose heparin. Although COVID-19 outcomes have improved over time, 15% of patients in ACTION still had either a thrombotic event or died. Continued investigation with randomised controlled trials assessing the use of anticoagulants and antiplatelets and the timing of administration during the course of COVID-19 are much needed.
  11 in total

1.  Pulmonary Vascular Endothelialitis, Thrombosis, and Angiogenesis in Covid-19.

Authors:  Maximilian Ackermann; Stijn E Verleden; Mark Kuehnel; Axel Haverich; Tobias Welte; Florian Laenger; Arno Vanstapel; Christopher Werlein; Helge Stark; Alexandar Tzankov; William W Li; Vincent W Li; Steven J Mentzer; Danny Jonigk
Journal:  N Engl J Med       Date:  2020-05-21       Impact factor: 91.245

2.  The win ratio: a new approach to the analysis of composite endpoints in clinical trials based on clinical priorities.

Authors:  Stuart J Pocock; Cono A Ariti; Timothy J Collier; Duolao Wang
Journal:  Eur Heart J       Date:  2011-09-06       Impact factor: 29.983

3.  Anticoagulant treatment is associated with decreased mortality in severe coronavirus disease 2019 patients with coagulopathy.

Authors:  Ning Tang; Huan Bai; Xing Chen; Jiale Gong; Dengju Li; Ziyong Sun
Journal:  J Thromb Haemost       Date:  2020-04-27       Impact factor: 5.824

4.  C-reactive protein and clinical outcomes in patients with COVID-19.

Authors:  Nathaniel R Smilowitz; Dennis Kunichoff; Michael Garshick; Binita Shah; Michael Pillinger; Judith S Hochman; Jeffrey S Berger
Journal:  Eur Heart J       Date:  2021-06-14       Impact factor: 29.983

5.  Therapeutic versus prophylactic anticoagulation for patients admitted to hospital with COVID-19 and elevated D-dimer concentration (ACTION): an open-label, multicentre, randomised, controlled trial.

Authors:  Renato D Lopes; Pedro Gabriel Melo de Barros E Silva; Remo H M Furtado; Ariane Vieira Scarlatelli Macedo; Bruna Bronhara; Lucas Petri Damiani; Lilian Mazza Barbosa; Júlia de Aveiro Morata; Eduardo Ramacciotti; Priscilla de Aquino Martins; Aryadne Lyrio de Oliveira; Vinicius Santana Nunes; Luiz Eduardo Fonteles Ritt; Ana Thereza Rocha; Lucas Tramujas; Sueli V Santos; Dario Rafael Abregu Diaz; Lorena Souza Viana; Lívia Maria Garcia Melro; Mariana Silveira de Alcântara Chaud; Estêvão Lanna Figueiredo; Fernando Carvalho Neuenschwander; Marianna Deway Andrade Dracoulakis; Rodolfo Godinho Souza Dourado Lima; Vicente Cés de Souza Dantas; Anne Cristine Silva Fernandes; Otávio Celso Eluf Gebara; Mauro Esteves Hernandes; Diego Aparecido Rios Queiroz; Viviane C Veiga; Manoel Fernandes Canesin; Leonardo Meira de Faria; Gilson Soares Feitosa-Filho; Marcelo Basso Gazzana; Idelzuíta Leandro Liporace; Aline de Oliveira Twardowsky; Lilia Nigro Maia; Flávia Ribeiro Machado; Alexandre de Matos Soeiro; Germano Emílio Conceição-Souza; Luciana Armaganijan; Patrícia O Guimarães; Regis G Rosa; Luciano C P Azevedo; John H Alexander; Alvaro Avezum; Alexandre B Cavalcanti; Otavio Berwanger
Journal:  Lancet       Date:  2021-06-04       Impact factor: 79.321

6.  Megakaryocytes and platelet-fibrin thrombi characterize multi-organ thrombosis at autopsy in COVID-19: A case series.

Authors:  Amy V Rapkiewicz; Xingchen Mai; Steven E Carsons; Stefania Pittaluga; David E Kleiner; Jeffrey S Berger; Sarun Thomas; Nicole M Adler; David M Charytan; Billel Gasmi; Judith S Hochman; Harmony R Reynolds
Journal:  EClinicalMedicine       Date:  2020-06-25

7.  Anticoagulation practice patterns in COVID-19: A global survey.

Authors:  Rachel P Rosovsky; Kristen M Sanfilippo; Tzu Fei Wang; Sandeep K Rajan; Surbhi Shah; Karlyn A Martin; Fionnuala Ní Áinle; Menno Huisman; Beverley J Hunt; Susan R Kahn; Barry Kevane; Agnes Y Y Lee; Claire McLintock; Lisa Baumann Kreuziger
Journal:  Res Pract Thromb Haemost       Date:  2020-08-19

8.  Incidence of thrombotic complications in critically ill ICU patients with COVID-19.

Authors:  F A Klok; M J H A Kruip; N J M van der Meer; M S Arbous; D A M P J Gommers; K M Kant; F H J Kaptein; J van Paassen; M A M Stals; M V Huisman; H Endeman
Journal:  Thromb Res       Date:  2020-04-10       Impact factor: 3.944

Review 9.  Heparin as a therapy for COVID-19: current evidence and future possibilities.

Authors:  Joseph A Hippensteel; Wells B LaRiviere; James F Colbert; Christophe J Langouët-Astrié; Eric P Schmidt
Journal:  Am J Physiol Lung Cell Mol Physiol       Date:  2020-06-10       Impact factor: 5.464

10.  COVID-19 and its implications for thrombosis and anticoagulation.

Authors:  Jean M Connors; Jerrold H Levy
Journal:  Blood       Date:  2020-06-04       Impact factor: 25.476

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  7 in total

1.  Analysis of Risk Factors of Soft Tissue Bleeding in COVID-19 Patients: A Point of View After Two Years of Pandemic.

Authors:  Eliodoro Faiella; Gennaro Castiello; Domiziana Santucci; Giuseppina Pacella; Caterina Bernetti; Moises Muley Villamu; Raffaele Antonelli Incalzi; Bruno Beomonte Zobel; Carlo Cosimo Quattrocchi; Rosario Francesco Grasso
Journal:  J Clin Med Res       Date:  2022-05-31

2.  Anticoagulant therapy for COVID-19: What we have learned and what are the unanswered questions?

Authors:  Dimitrios Giannis; James D Douketis; Alex C Spyropoulos
Journal:  Eur J Intern Med       Date:  2021-11-11       Impact factor: 4.487

3.  Anticoagulant Treatment Regimens in Patients With Covid-19: A Meta-Analysis.

Authors:  Anselm Jorda; Jolanta M Siller-Matula; Markus Zeitlinger; Bernd Jilma; Georg Gelbenegger
Journal:  Clin Pharmacol Ther       Date:  2021-12-19       Impact factor: 6.903

Review 4.  Complement-mediated microvascular injury and thrombosis in the pathogenesis of severe COVID-19: A review.

Authors:  Panagiota Gianni; Mark Goldin; Sam Ngu; Stefanos Zafeiropoulos; Georgios Geropoulos; Dimitrios Giannis
Journal:  World J Exp Med       Date:  2022-07-20

5.  Disseminated intravascular coagulation complicating mild or asymptomatic maternal COVID-19.

Authors:  Jeanette Carpenter; C Andrew Combs; Bronwen Kahn; Kimberly Maurel; Reese Clark
Journal:  AJOG Glob Rep       Date:  2022-09-23

Review 6.  Calcium Signaling Pathway Is Involved in the Shedding of ACE2 Catalytic Ectodomain: New Insights for Clinical and Therapeutic Applications of ACE2 for COVID-19.

Authors:  Artemio García-Escobar; Silvio Vera-Vera; Alfonso Jurado-Román; Santiago Jiménez-Valero; Guillermo Galeote; Raúl Moreno
Journal:  Biomolecules       Date:  2022-01-05

7.  Remote history of VTE is associated with severe COVID-19 in middle and older age: UK Biobank cohort study.

Authors:  Jana J Anderson; Frederick K Ho; Claire L Niedzwiedz; Srinivasa Vittal Katikireddi; Carlos Celis-Morales; Stamatina Iliodromiti; Paul Welsh; Pierpaolo Pellicori; Evangelia Demou; Claire E Hastie; Donald M Lyall; Stuart R Gray; John F Forbes; Jason M R Gill; Daniel F Mackay; Colin Berry; John G F Cleland; Naveed Sattar; Jill P Pell
Journal:  J Thromb Haemost       Date:  2021-07-20       Impact factor: 16.036

  7 in total

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