Rates, management, and outcome of rivaroxaban bleeding in daily care: results from the Dresden NOAC registry

Jan Beyer-Westendorf, Kati Förster, Sven Pannach, Franziska Ebertz, Vera Gelbricht, Christoph Thieme, Franziska Michalski, Christina Köhler, Sebastian Werth, Kurtulus Sahin, Luise Tittl, Ulrike Hänsel, Norbert Weiss, Jan Beyer-Westendorf, Kati Förster, Sven Pannach, Franziska Ebertz, Vera Gelbricht, Christoph Thieme, Franziska Michalski, Christina Köhler, Sebastian Werth, Kurtulus Sahin, Luise Tittl, Ulrike Hänsel, Norbert Weiss

Abstract

Worldwide, rivaroxaban is increasingly used for stroke prevention in atrial fibrillation and treatment of venous thromboembolism, but little is known about rivaroxaban-related bleeding complications in daily care. Using data from a prospective, noninterventional oral anticoagulation registry of daily care patients (Dresden NOAC registry), we analyzed rates, management, and outcome of rivaroxaban-related bleeding. Between October 1, 2011, and December 31, 2013, 1776 rivaroxaban patients were enrolled. So far, 762 patients (42.9%) reported 1082 bleeding events during/within 3 days after last intake of rivaroxaban (58.9% minor, 35.0% of nonmajor clinically relevant, and 6.1% major bleeding according to International Society on Thrombosis and Haemostasis definition). In case of major bleeding, surgical or interventional treatment was needed in 37.8% and prothrombin complex concentrate in 9.1%. In the time-to-first-event analysis, 100-patient-year rates of major bleeding were 3.1 (95% confidence interval 2.2-4.3) for stroke prevention in atrial fibrillation and 4.1 (95% confidence interval 2.5-6.4) for venous thromboembolism patients, respectively. In the as-treated analysis, case fatality rates of bleeding leading to hospitalizations were 5.1% and 6.3% at days 30 and 90 after bleeding, respectively. Our data indicate that, in real life, rates of rivaroxaban-related major bleeding may be lower and that the outcome may at least not be worse than that of major vitamin K antagonist bleeding, and probably better. This trial was registered at www.clinicaltrials.gov as identifier #NCT01588119.

© 2014 by The American Society of Hematology.

Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Kaplan-Meier estimation for first major bleeding (intention-to-treat [ITT] analysis set).

Source: PubMed

3
S'abonner