A comprehensive analysis of the effects of rivaroxaban on stroke or transient ischaemic attack in patients with heart failure, coronary artery disease, and sinus rhythm: the COMMANDER HF trial

Mandeep R Mehra, Muthiah Vaduganathan, Min Fu, João Pedro Ferreira, Stefan D Anker, John G F Cleland, Carolyn S P Lam, Dirk J van Veldhuisen, William M Byra, Theodore E Spiro, Hsiaowei Deng, Faiez Zannad, Barry Greenberg, Mandeep R Mehra, Muthiah Vaduganathan, Min Fu, João Pedro Ferreira, Stefan D Anker, John G F Cleland, Carolyn S P Lam, Dirk J van Veldhuisen, William M Byra, Theodore E Spiro, Hsiaowei Deng, Faiez Zannad, Barry Greenberg

Abstract

Aims: Stroke is often a devastating event among patients with heart failure with reduced ejection (HFrEF). In COMMANDER HF, rivaroxaban 2.5 mg b.i.d. did not reduce the composite of first occurrence of death, stroke, or myocardial infarction compared with placebo in patients with HFrEF, coronary artery disease (CAD), and sinus rhythm. We now examine the incidence, timing, type, severity, and predictors of stroke or a transient ischaemic attack (TIA), and seek to establish the net clinical benefit of treatment with low-dose rivaroxaban.

Methods and results: In this double-blind, randomized trial, 5022 patients who had HFrEF(≤40%), elevated natriuretic peptides, CAD, and who were in sinus rhythm were treated with rivaroxaban 2.5 mg b.i.d. or placebo in addition to antiplatelet therapy, after an episode of worsening HF. The primary neurological outcome for this post hoc analysis was time to first event of any stroke or TIA. Over a median follow-up of 20.5 (25th-75th percentiles 20.0-20.9) months, 150 all-cause stroke (127) or TIA (23) events occurred (ischaemic stroke in 82% and haemorrhagic stroke in 11% of stroke events). Overall, 47.5% of first-time strokes were either disabling (16.5%) or fatal (31%). Prior stroke, low body mass index, geographic region, and the CHA2DS2-VASc score were predictors of stroke/TIA. Rivaroxaban significantly reduced the primary neurological endpoint of all-cause stroke or TIA compared with placebo by 32% (1.29 events vs. 1.90 events per 100 patient-years), adjusted for the time from index HF event to randomization and stratified by geographic region (adjusted hazard ratio 0.68, 95% confidence interval 0.49-0.94), with a number needed to treat of 164 patients per year to prevent one stroke/TIA event. The principal safety endpoint of fatal bleeding or bleeding into a critical space, occurred at a similar rate on rivaroxaban and placebo (0.44 events vs. 0.55 events per 100 patient-years).

Conclusions: Patients with HFrEF and CAD are at risk for stroke or TIA in the period following an episode of worsening heart failure in the absence of atrial fibrillation. Most strokes are of ischaemic origin and nearly half are either disabling or fatal. Rivaroxaban at a dose of 2.5 mg b.i.d. reduced rates of stroke or TIA compared with placebo in this population.

Trial registration: COMMANDER HF (A Study to Assess the Effectiveness and Safety of Rivaroxaban in Reducing the Risk of Death, Myocardial Infarction, or Stroke in Participants with Heart Failure and Coronary Artery Disease Following an Episode of Decompensated Heart Failure); ClinicalTrials.gov NCT01877915.

Keywords: Heart failure; Oral anticoagulation; Stroke; Thrombotic; Transient ischaemic attack.

© The Author(s) 2019. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the European Society of Cardiology.

Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Temporal pattern of risk of stroke/transient ischaemic attack after an episode of worsening chronic heart failure with reduced ejection in the placebo arm of COMMANDER HF. The total duration of time was calculated by adding the time from worsening heart failure episode to randomization to the time from randomization to stroke/transient ischaemic attack. The incremental incidence rate (red bars)) and its 95% confidence intervals (grey lines) for each time segment were derived using the bootstrap method (10 000 resamples). Kaplan–Meier cumulative risk estimates over the first 12 months after an episode of worsening heart failure are displayed in blue.
Figure 2
Figure 2
Distribution of COMMANDER HF participants and observed stroke or transient ischaemic attack rates by CHA2DS2-VASc score. * Given strong treatment effect of rivaroxaban vs. placebo on stroke/transient ischaemic attack, Cox proportional hazards models for risk prediction were performed in the placebo group alone.
Take home figure
Take home figure
Time to first occurrence of stroke or transient ischaemic attack. Cox proportional hazards models were adjusted for all covariates presented in Table 2. Analyses were performed in the intention-to-treat cohort including all randomized unique subjects who have a signed valid informed consent. CI, confidence interval; HR, hazard ratio; TIA, transient ischaemic attack.
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/instance/6868495/bin/ehz427f3.jpg

References

    1. Stolker JM, Spertus JA, Cohen DJ, Jones PG, Jain KK, Bamberger E, Lonergan BB, Chan PS.. Rethinking composite end points in clinical trials: insights from patients and trialists. Circulation 2014;130:1254–1261.
    1. Vaduganathan M, Patel RB, Yancy CW.. Stroke prevention in heart failure and sinus rhythm: where do we go from here? Eur J Heart Fail 2016;18:1267–1269.
    1. Benjamin EJ, Muntner P, Alonso A, Bittencourt MS, Callaway CW, Carson AP, Chamberlain AM, Chang AR, Cheng S, Das SR, Delling FN, Djousse L, Elkind MSV, Ferguson JF, Fornage M, Jordan LC, Khan SS, Kissela BM, Knutson KL, Kwan TW, Lackland DT, Lewis TT, Lichtman JH, Longenecker CT, Loop MS, Lutsey PL, Martin SS, Matsushita K, Moran AE, Mussolino ME, O'Flaherty M, Pandey A, Perak AM, Rosamond WD, Roth GA, Sampson UKA, Satou GM, Schroeder EB, Shah SH, Spartano NL, Stokes A, Tirschwell DL, Tsao CW, Turakhia MP, VanWagner LB, Wilkins JT, Wong SS, Virani SS.. Heart disease and stroke statistics-2019 update: a report from the American Heart Association. Circulation 2019;139:e56–e528.
    1. Melgaard L, Gorst-Rasmussen A, Lane DA, Rasmussen LH, Larsen TB, Lip GY.. Assessment of the CHA2DS2-VASc score in predicting ischemic stroke, thromboembolism, and death in patients with heart failure with and without atrial fibrillation. JAMA 2015;314:1030–1038.
    1. Ferreira JP, Girerd N, Gregson J, Latar I, Sharma A, Pfeffer MA, McMurray JJV, Abdul-Rahim AH, Pitt B, Dickstein K, Rossignol P, Zannad F.. Stroke risk in patients with reduced ejection fraction after myocardial infarction without atrial fibrillation. J Am Coll Cardiol 2018;71:727–735.
    1. Gheorghiade M, Vaduganathan M, Fonarow GC, Greene SJ, Greenberg BH, Liu PP, Massie BM, Mehra MR, Metra M, Zannad F, Cleland JG, van Veldhuisen DJ, Shah AN, Butler J.. Anticoagulation in heart failure: current status and future direction. Heart Fail Rev 2013;18:797–813.
    1. Cleland JG, Findlay I, Jafri S, Sutton G, Falk R, Bulpitt C, Prentice C, Ford I, Trainer A, Poole-Wilson PA.. The Warfarin/Aspirin Study in Heart failure (WASH): a randomized trial comparing antithrombotic strategies for patients with heart failure. Am Heart J 2004;148:157–164.
    1. Cokkinos DV, Haralabopoulos GC, Kostis JB, Toutouzas PK.. Efficacy of antithrombotic therapy in chronic heart failure: the HELAS study. Eur J Heart Fail 2006;8:428–432.
    1. Massie BM, Collins JF, Ammon SE, Armstrong PW, Cleland JG, Ezekowitz M, Jafri SM, Krol WF, O'Connor CM, Schulman KA, Teo K, Warren SR.. Randomized trial of warfarin, aspirin, and clopidogrel in patients with chronic heart failure: the Warfarin and Antiplatelet Therapy in Chronic Heart Failure (WATCH) trial. Circulation 2009;119:1616–1624.
    1. Homma S, Thompson JL, Pullicino PM, Levin B, Freudenberger RS, Teerlink JR, Ammon SE, Graham S, Sacco RL, Mann DL, Mohr JP, Massie BM, Labovitz AJ, Anker SD, Lok DJ, Ponikowski P, Estol CJ, Lip GY, Di Tullio MR, Sanford AR, Mejia V, Gabriel AP, del Valle ML, Buchsbaum R.. Warfarin and aspirin in patients with heart failure and sinus rhythm. N Engl J Med 2012;366:1859–1869.
    1. Lip GYH, Ponikowski P, Andreotti F, Anker SD, Filippatos G, Homma S, Morais J, Pullicino P, Rasmussen LH, Marin F, Lane DA, Lip GYH, Ponikowski P, Andreotti F, Anker SD, Filippatos G, Homma S, Morais J, Pullicino P, Rasmussen LH, Marin F, Lane DA, McMurray J, Hoes A, Ten Berg J, De Caterina R, Kristensen S, Zeymer U.. Thrombo-embolism and antithrombotic therapy for heart failure in sinus rhythm. A joint consensus document from the ESC Heart Failure Association and the ESC Working Group on Thrombosis. Eur J Heart Fail 2012;14:681–695.
    1. Yancy CW, Jessup M, Bozkurt B, Butler J, Casey DE Jr., Drazner MH, Fonarow GC, Geraci SA, Horwich T, Januzzi JL, Johnson MR, Kasper EK, Levy WC, Masoudi FA, McBride PE, McMurray JJ, Mitchell JE, Peterson PN, Riegel B, Sam F, Stevenson LW, Tang WH, Tsai EJ, Wilkoff BL.. 2013 ACCF/AHA guideline for the management of heart failure: executive summary: a report of the American College of Cardiology Foundation/American Heart Association Task Force on Practice Guidelines . Circulation 2013;128:1810–1852.
    1. Zannad F, Anker SD, Byra WM, Cleland JGF, Fu M, Gheorghiade M, Lam CSP, Mehra MR, Neaton JD, Nessel CC, Spiro TE, van Veldhuisen DJ, Greenberg B.. Rivaroxaban in patients with heart failure, sinus rhythm, and coronary disease. N Engl J Med 2018;379:1332–1342.
    1. Zannad F, Greenberg B, Cleland JG, Gheorghiade M, van Veldhuisen DJ, Mehra MR, Anker SD, Byra WM, Fu M, Mills RM.. Rationale and design of a randomized, double-blind, event-driven, multicentre study comparing the efficacy and safety of oral rivaroxaban with placebo for reducing the risk of death, myocardial infarction or stroke in subjects with heart failure and significant coronary artery disease following an exacerbation of heart failure: the COMMANDER HF trial. Eur J Heart Fail 2015;17:735–742.
    1. Banks JL, Marotta CA.. Outcomes validity and reliability of the modified Rankin scale: implications for stroke clinical trials: a literature review and synthesis. Stroke 2007;38:1091–1096.
    1. Abdul-Rahim AH, Perez AC, Fulton RL, Jhund PS, Latini R, Tognoni G, Wikstrand J, Kjekshus J, Lip GY, Maggioni AP, Tavazzi L, Lees KR, McMurray JJ.. Risk of stroke in chronic heart failure patients without atrial fibrillation: analysis of the Controlled Rosuvastatin in Multinational Trial Heart Failure (CORONA) and the Gruppo Italiano per lo Studio della Sopravvivenza nell'Insufficienza Cardiaca-Heart Failure (GISSI-HF) Trials. Circulation 2015;131:1486–1494; discussion 1494.
    1. Austin PC, Lee DS, Fine JP.. Introduction to the analysis of survival data in the presence of competing risks. Circulation 2016;133:601–609.
    1. Bajaj NS, Vaduganathan M, Qamar A, Gupta K, Gupta A, Golwala H, Butler J, Goldhaber SZ, Mehra MR.. Extended prophylaxis for venous thromboembolism after hospitalization for medical illness: a trial sequential and cumulative meta-analysis. PLoS Med 2019;16:e1002797..
    1. Gibson CM, Chi G, Halaby R, Korjian S, Daaboul Y, Jain P, Arbetter D, Goldhaber SZ, Hull R, Hernandez AF, Gold A, Bandman O, Harrington RA, Cohen AT.. Extended-duration betrixaban reduces the risk of stroke versus standard-dose enoxaparin among hospitalized medically ill patients: an APEX Trial Substudy (Acute Medically Ill Venous Thromboembolism Prevention With Extended Duration Betrixaban). Circulation 2017;135:648–655.
    1. Gerotziafas GT, Elalamy I, Depasse F, Perzborn E, Samama MM.. In vitro inhibition of thrombin generation, after tissue factor pathway activation, by the oral, direct factor Xa inhibitor rivaroxaban. J Thromb Haemost 2007;5:886–888.
    1. Eikelboom JW, Connolly SJ, Bosch J, Dagenais GR, Hart RG, Shestakovska O, Diaz R, Alings M, Lonn EM, Anand SS, Widimsky P, Hori M, Avezum A, Piegas LS, Branch KRH, Probstfield J, Bhatt DL, Zhu J, Liang Y, Maggioni AP, Lopez-Jaramillo P, O'Donnell M, Kakkar AK, Fox KAA, Parkhomenko AN, Ertl G, Stork S, Keltai M, Ryden L, Pogosova N, Dans AL, Lanas F, Commerford PJ, Torp-Pedersen C, Guzik TJ, Verhamme PB, Vinereanu D, Kim JH, Tonkin AM, Lewis BS, Felix C, Yusoff K, Steg PG, Metsarinne KP, Cook Bruns N, Misselwitz F, Chen E, Leong D, Yusuf S.. Rivaroxaban with or without aspirin in stable cardiovascular disease. N Engl J Med 2017;377:1319–1330.
    1. Mega JL, Braunwald E, Wiviott SD, Bassand JP, Bhatt DL, Bode C, Burton P, Cohen M, Cook-Bruns N, Fox KA, Goto S, Murphy SA, Plotnikov AN, Schneider D, Sun X, Verheugt FW, Gibson CM.. Rivaroxaban in patients with a recent acute coronary syndrome. N Engl J Med 2012;366:9–19.
    1. Shen L, Jhund PS, Petrie MC, Claggett BL, Barlera S, Cleland JGF, Dargie HJ, Granger CB, Kjekshus J, Kober L, Latini R, Maggioni AP, Packer M, Pitt B, Solomon SD, Swedberg K, Tavazzi L, Wikstrand J, Zannad F, Zile MR, McMurray J.. Declining risk of sudden death in heart failure. N Engl J Med 2017;377:41–51.
    1. Solomon SD, Anavekar N, Skali H, McMurray JJ, Swedberg K, Yusuf S, Granger CB, Michelson EL, Wang D, Pocock S, Pfeffer MA.. Influence of ejection fraction on cardiovascular outcomes in a broad spectrum of heart failure patients. Circulation 2005;112:3738–3744.
    1. Greenberg B, Neaton JD, Anker SD, Byra WM, Cleland JGF, Deng H, Fu M, La Police DA, Lam CSP, Mehra MR, Nessel CC, Spiro TE, van Veldhuisen DJ, Vanden Boom CM, Zannad F.. Association of rivaroxaban with thromboembolic events in patients with heart failure, coronary disease, and sinus rhythm: a post hoc analysis of the COMMANDER HF trial. JAMA Cardiol 2019.
    1. Ferreira JP, Girerd N, Alshalash S, Konstam MA, Zannad F.. Antithrombotic therapy in heart failure patients with and without atrial fibrillation: update and future challenges. Eur Heart J 2016;37:2455–2464.
    1. Ye S QM, Zhao B, Buchsbaum R, Sacco RL, Levin B, Tullio Mr D, Mann DL, Pullicino PM, Freudenberger RS, Teerlink JR, Mohr JP, Graham S, Labovitz AJ, Estol CJ, Lok DJ, Ponikowski P, Anker SD, Lip GY, Thompson JL, Homma S, for the WARCEF Investigators. CHA2DS2-VASc score and adverse outcomes in patients with heart failure with reduced ejection fraction and sinus rhythm. Eur J Heart Fail 2016.
    1. Ferreira JP, Girerd N, Rossignol P, Zannad F.. Geographic differences in heart failure trials. Eur J Heart Fail 2015;17:893–905.
    1. Kristensen SL, Martinez F, Jhund PS, Arango JL, Bĕlohlávek J, Boytsov S, Cabrera W, Gomez E, Hagège AA, Huang J, Kiatchoosakun S, Kim K-S, Mendoza I, Senni M, Squire IB, Vinereanu D, Wong RC-C, Gong J, Lefkowitz MP, Rizkala AR, Rouleau JL, Shi VC, Solomon SD, Swedberg K, Zile MR, Packer M, McMurray JJV.. Geographic variations in the PARADIGM-HF heart failure trial. Eur Heart J 2016;37:3167–3174.

Source: PubMed

3
Prenumerera