Efficacy and Safety of Apixaban Compared With Warfarin at Different Levels of Predicted International Normalized Ratio Control for Stroke Prevention in Atrial Fibrillation

Lars Wallentin(Uppsala University Hospital), Renato D. Lópes(Uppsala University Hospital), Michael G. Hanna(Uppsala University Hospital), Laine Thomas(Uppsala University Hospital), Anne S. Hellkamp(Uppsala University Hospital), Sunil Nepal(Uppsala University Hospital), Elaine M. Hylek(Uppsala University Hospital), Sana M. Al‐Khatib(Uppsala University Hospital), John H. Alexander(Uppsala University Hospital), Marco Alings(Uppsala University Hospital), John Amerena(Uppsala University Hospital), Jack Ansell(Uppsala University Hospital), Philip E. Aylward(Uppsala University Hospital), Jozef Bartúnek(Uppsala University Hospital), Patrick Commerford(Uppsala University Hospital), Raffaele De Caterina(Uppsala University Hospital), Çetin Erol(Uppsala University Hospital), Veli-Pekka Harjola(Uppsala University Hospital), Claes Held(Uppsala University Hospital), John D. Horowitz(Uppsala University Hospital), Kurt Huber(Uppsala University Hospital), Steen Husted(Uppsala University Hospital), Mátyás Keltai(Uppsala University Hospital), Fernando Laņas(Universidad de La Frontera), Liu Lisheng(Uppsala University Hospital), John J.V. McMurray(Uppsala University Hospital), Byung‐Hee Oh(Uppsala University Hospital), Mårten Rosenqvist(Uppsala University Hospital), Witold Rużyłło(Uppsala University Hospital), Philippe Gabríel Steg(Uppsala University Hospital), Dragoş Vinereanu(Uppsala University Hospital), Denis Xavier(Uppsala University Hospital), Christopher B. Granger(Uppsala University Hospital)
Circulation
May 3, 2013
Cited by 214Open Access
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Abstract

BACKGROUND: In the Apixaban for Reduction in Stroke and Other Thromboembolic Events in Atrial Fibrillation (ARISTOTLE) trial, apixaban compared with warfarin reduced stroke and systemic embolism, major bleeding, and mortality. We evaluated treatment effects in relation to 2 predictions of time in therapeutic range (TTR). METHODS AND RESULTS: The trial randomized 18 201 patients with atrial fibrillation to apixaban 5 mg twice daily or warfarin for at least 12 months. For each patient, a center average TTR was estimated with the use of a linear mixed model on the basis of the real TTRs in its warfarin-treated patients, with a fixed effect for country and random effect for center. For each patient, an individual TTR was also predicted with the use of a linear mixed effects model including patient characteristics as well. Median center average TTR was 66% (interquartile limits, 61% and 71%). Rates of stroke or systemic embolism, major bleeding, and mortality were consistently lower with apixaban than with warfarin across center average TTR and individual TTR quartiles. In the lowest and highest center average TTR quartiles, hazard ratios for stroke or systemic embolism were 0.73 (95% confidence interval [CI], 0.53-1.00) and 0.88 (95% CI, 0.57-1.35) (Pinteraction=0.078), for mortality were 0.91 (95% CI, 0.74-1.13) and 0.91 (95% CI, 0.71-1.16) (Pinteraction=0.34), and for major bleeding were 0.50 (95% CI, 0.36-0.70) and 0.75 (95% CI, 0.58-0.97) (Pinteraction=0.095), respectively. Similar results were seen for quartiles of individual TTR. CONCLUSIONS: The benefits of apixaban compared with warfarin for stroke or systemic embolism, bleeding, and mortality appear similar across the range of centers' and patients' predicted quality of international normalized ratio control.


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