Final Study Report of Andexanet Alfa for Major Bleeding With Factor Xa Inhibitors.


Journal

Circulation
ISSN: 1524-4539
Titre abrégé: Circulation
Pays: United States
ID NLM: 0147763

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
28 03 2023
Historique:
medline: 29 3 2023
pubmed: 22 2 2023
entrez: 21 2 2023
Statut: ppublish

Résumé

Andexanet alfa is a modified recombinant inactive factor Xa (FXa) designed to reverse FXa inhibitors. ANNEXA-4 (Andexanet Alfa, a Novel Antidote to the Anticoagulation Effects of Factor Xa Inhibitors) was a multicenter, prospective, phase-3b/4, single-group cohort study that evaluated andexanet alfa in patients with acute major bleeding. The results of the final analyses are presented. Patients with acute major bleeding within 18 hours of FXa inhibitor administration were enrolled. Co-primary end points were anti-FXa activity change from baseline during andexanet alfa treatment and excellent or good hemostatic efficacy, defined by a scale used in previous reversal studies, at 12 hours. The efficacy population included patients with baseline anti-FXa activity levels above predefined thresholds (≥75 ng/mL for apixaban and rivaroxaban, ≥40 ng/mL for edoxaban, and ≥0.25 IU/mL for enoxaparin; reported in the same units used for calibrators) who were adjudicated as meeting major bleeding criteria (modified International Society on Thrombosis and Haemostasis definition). The safety population included all patients. Major bleeding criteria, hemostatic efficacy, thrombotic events (stratified by occurring before or after restart of either prophylactic [ie, a lower dose, for prevention rather than treatment] or full-dose oral anticoagulation), and deaths were assessed by an independent adjudication committee. Median endogenous thrombin potential at baseline and across the follow-up period was a secondary outcome. There were 479 patients enrolled (mean age, 78 years; 54% male; 86% White); 81% were anticoagulated for atrial fibrillation, and the median time was 11.4 hours since last dose, with 245 (51%) on apixaban, 176 (37%) on rivaroxaban, 36 (8%) on edoxaban, and 22 (5%) on enoxaparin. Bleeding was predominantly intracranial (n=331 [69%]) or gastrointestinal (n=109 [23%]). In evaluable apixaban patients (n=172), median anti-FXa activity decreased from 146.9 ng/mL to 10.0 ng/mL (reduction, 93% [95% CI, 94-93]); in rivaroxaban patients (n=132), it decreased from 214.6 ng/mL to 10.8 ng/mL (94% [95% CI, 95-93]); in edoxaban patients (n=28), it decreased from 121.1 ng/mL to 24.4 ng/mL (71% [95% CI, 82-65); and in enoxaparin patients (n=17), it decreased from 0.48 IU/mL to 0.11 IU/mL (75% [95% CI, 79-67]). Excellent or good hemostasis occurred in 274 of 342 evaluable patients (80% [95% CI, 75-84]). In the safety population, thrombotic events occurred in 50 (10%) patients; in 16 patients, these occurred during treatment with prophylactic anticoagulation that began after the bleeding event. No thrombotic episodes occurred after oral anticoagulation restart. Specific to certain populations, reduction of anti-FXa activity from baseline to nadir significantly predicted hemostatic efficacy in patients with intracranial hemorrhage (area under the receiver operating characteristic curve, 0.62 [95% CI, 0.54-0.70]) and correlated with lower mortality in patients <75 years of age (adjusted In patients with major bleeding associated with the use of FXa inhibitors, treatment with andexanet alfa reduced anti-FXa activity and was associated with good or excellent hemostatic efficacy in 80% of patients. URL: https://www. gov; Unique identifier: NCT02329327.

Sections du résumé

BACKGROUND
Andexanet alfa is a modified recombinant inactive factor Xa (FXa) designed to reverse FXa inhibitors. ANNEXA-4 (Andexanet Alfa, a Novel Antidote to the Anticoagulation Effects of Factor Xa Inhibitors) was a multicenter, prospective, phase-3b/4, single-group cohort study that evaluated andexanet alfa in patients with acute major bleeding. The results of the final analyses are presented.
METHODS
Patients with acute major bleeding within 18 hours of FXa inhibitor administration were enrolled. Co-primary end points were anti-FXa activity change from baseline during andexanet alfa treatment and excellent or good hemostatic efficacy, defined by a scale used in previous reversal studies, at 12 hours. The efficacy population included patients with baseline anti-FXa activity levels above predefined thresholds (≥75 ng/mL for apixaban and rivaroxaban, ≥40 ng/mL for edoxaban, and ≥0.25 IU/mL for enoxaparin; reported in the same units used for calibrators) who were adjudicated as meeting major bleeding criteria (modified International Society on Thrombosis and Haemostasis definition). The safety population included all patients. Major bleeding criteria, hemostatic efficacy, thrombotic events (stratified by occurring before or after restart of either prophylactic [ie, a lower dose, for prevention rather than treatment] or full-dose oral anticoagulation), and deaths were assessed by an independent adjudication committee. Median endogenous thrombin potential at baseline and across the follow-up period was a secondary outcome.
RESULTS
There were 479 patients enrolled (mean age, 78 years; 54% male; 86% White); 81% were anticoagulated for atrial fibrillation, and the median time was 11.4 hours since last dose, with 245 (51%) on apixaban, 176 (37%) on rivaroxaban, 36 (8%) on edoxaban, and 22 (5%) on enoxaparin. Bleeding was predominantly intracranial (n=331 [69%]) or gastrointestinal (n=109 [23%]). In evaluable apixaban patients (n=172), median anti-FXa activity decreased from 146.9 ng/mL to 10.0 ng/mL (reduction, 93% [95% CI, 94-93]); in rivaroxaban patients (n=132), it decreased from 214.6 ng/mL to 10.8 ng/mL (94% [95% CI, 95-93]); in edoxaban patients (n=28), it decreased from 121.1 ng/mL to 24.4 ng/mL (71% [95% CI, 82-65); and in enoxaparin patients (n=17), it decreased from 0.48 IU/mL to 0.11 IU/mL (75% [95% CI, 79-67]). Excellent or good hemostasis occurred in 274 of 342 evaluable patients (80% [95% CI, 75-84]). In the safety population, thrombotic events occurred in 50 (10%) patients; in 16 patients, these occurred during treatment with prophylactic anticoagulation that began after the bleeding event. No thrombotic episodes occurred after oral anticoagulation restart. Specific to certain populations, reduction of anti-FXa activity from baseline to nadir significantly predicted hemostatic efficacy in patients with intracranial hemorrhage (area under the receiver operating characteristic curve, 0.62 [95% CI, 0.54-0.70]) and correlated with lower mortality in patients <75 years of age (adjusted
CONCLUSIONS
In patients with major bleeding associated with the use of FXa inhibitors, treatment with andexanet alfa reduced anti-FXa activity and was associated with good or excellent hemostatic efficacy in 80% of patients.
REGISTRATION
URL: https://www.
CLINICALTRIALS
gov; Unique identifier: NCT02329327.

Identifiants

pubmed: 36802876
doi: 10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.121.057844
doi:

Substances chimiques

Anticoagulants 0
edoxaban NDU3J18APO
Enoxaparin 0
Factor Xa EC 3.4.21.6
Factor Xa Inhibitors 0
Hemostatics 0
PRT064445 0
Recombinant Proteins 0
Rivaroxaban 9NDF7JZ4M3
Thrombin EC 3.4.21.5

Banques de données

ClinicalTrials.gov
['NCT02329327']

Types de publication

Clinical Trial, Phase III Clinical Trial, Phase IV Journal Article Multicenter Study Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

Langues

eng

Sous-ensembles de citation

IM

Pagination

1026-1038

Investigateurs

R Anand (R)
A Bastani (A)
C Clark (C)
M Concha (M)
J Cornell (J)
K Dombrowski (K)
G Fermann (G)
J Fulmer (J)
J Goldstein (J)
D Kereiakes (D)
T Milling (T)
D Pallin (D)
N Patel (N)
M Refaai (M)
M Rehman (M)
A Schmaier (A)
E Schwarz (E)
W Shillinglaw (W)
M Spohn (M)
T Takata (T)
A Venkat (A)
J Welker (J)
I Welsby (I)
J Wilson (J)
L Van Keer (L)
F Verschuren (F)
M Blostein (M)
J Eikelboom (J)
K Althaus (K)
J Berrouschot (J)
G Braun (G)
T Doeppner (T)
R Dziewas (R)
S Genth-Zotz (S)
P Greinacher (P)
F Hamann (F)
F Hanses (F)
W Heide (W)
B Kallmuenzer (B)
P Kermer (P)
S Poli (S)
G Royl (G)
S Schellong (S)
S Schnupp (S)
J Schwarze (J)
C Spies (C)
G Thomalla (G)
M von Mering (M)
K Weissenborn (K)
F Wollenweber (F)
C Gumbinger (C)
U Jaschinski (U)
M Maschke (M)
H-C Mochmann (HC)
W Pfeilschifter (W)
C Pohlmann (C)
R Zahn (R)
P Bouzat (P)
J Schmidt (J)
C Vallejo (C)
B Floccard (B)
M Coppens (M)
S van Wissen (S)
E Arellano-Rodrigo (E)
E Valles (E)
R Alikhan (R)
K Breen (K)
R Hall (R)
M Crowther (M)
P Albaladejo (P)
A Cohen (A)
A M Demchuk (AM)
J Schmidt (J)
D G Wyse (DG)
D A Garcia (DA)
M Prins (M)
J Nakamya (J)
H R Büller (HR)
K W Mahaffey (KW)
J H Alexander (JH)
J A Cairns (JA)
R G Hart (RG)
C D Joyner (CD)
G E Raskob (GE)
S Schulman (S)
R Veltkamp (R)
B Meeks (B)
E Zotova (E)
S Ahmad (S)
T Pinto (T)
K Baker (K)
A Dykstra (A)
I Holadyk-Gris (I)
A Malvaso (A)
A M Demchuk (AM)

Auteurs

Truman J Milling (TJ)

Seton Dell Medical School Stroke Institute, Dell Medical School, University of Texas at Austin (T.J.M.).

Saskia Middeldorp (S)

Department of Internal Medicine and Radboud Institute of Health Sciences, Nijmegen, the Netherlands (S.M.).

Lizhen Xu (L)

Population Health Research Institute (L.X., A.S., S.J.C.), McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada.

Bruce Koch (B)

Alexion, AstraZeneca Rare Disease, Boston, MA (B.K.).

Andrew Demchuk (A)

Departments of Clinical Neurosciences and Radiology, Cumming School of Medicine, University of Calgary, Alberta, Canada (A.D.).

John W Eikelboom (JW)

Department of Medicine (J.W.E., M. Crowther), McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada.

Peter Verhamme (P)

Center for Molecular and Vascular Biology, University of Leuven, Belgium (P.V.).

Alexander T Cohen (AT)

Guy's and St. Thomas' Hospitals, London, UK (A.T.C.).

Jan Beyer-Westendorf (J)

Department of Medicine I, Division of Hematology and Hemostasis, University Hospital Dresden, Germany (J.B.-W.).

C Michael Gibson (CM)

Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA (C.M.G.).

Jose Lopez-Sendon (J)

Instituto de Investigación Hospital Universitario, La Paz, Madrid, Spain (J.L.-S.).

Mark Crowther (M)

Department of Medicine (J.W.E., M. Crowther), McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada.

Ashkan Shoamanesh (A)

Population Health Research Institute (L.X., A.S., S.J.C.), McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada.

Michiel Coppens (M)

Department of Vascular Medicine, Amsterdam Cardiovascular Sciences, Amsterdam University Medical Centers, University of Amsterdam, the Netherlands (M. Coppens).

Jeannot Schmidt (J)

Centre Hospitalier Universitaire de Clermont-Ferrand, France (J.S.).

Pierre Albaladejo (P)

Grenoble-Alpes University Hospital, France (P.A.).

Stuart J Connolly (SJ)

Population Health Research Institute (L.X., A.S., S.J.C.), McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada.

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Classifications MeSH