Direct Oral Anticoagulants Versus Warfarin in the Treatment of Cerebral Venous Thrombosis (ACTION-CVT): A Multicenter International Study

Shadi Yaghi(Norwegian Womens Public Health Association), Liqi Shu(Norwegian Womens Public Health Association), Ekaterina Bakradze(University of Alabama at Birmingham), Setareh Salehi Omran(University of Colorado Denver), James Giles(Washington University in St. Louis), Jordan Amar(Washington University in St. Louis), Nils Henninger(Clark University), Marwa Elnazeir(University of Massachusetts Chan Medical School), Ava L. Liberman(Cornell University), Khadean Moncrieffe(Montefiore Medical Center), Jenny Lu(Montefiore Medical Center), Richa Sharma(Yale Cancer Center), Yee Kuang Cheng(Spectrum Health), Adeel Zubair(Yale Cancer Center), Alexis N. Simpkins(University of Florida), Grace T. Li(University of Florida), Justin Kung(University of Florida), Dezaray Perez(University of Florida), Mirjam R. Heldner(University Hospital of Bern), Adrian Scutelnic(University Hospital of Bern), David Seiffge(University Hospital of Bern), Bernhard Siepen(University Hospital of Bern), Aaron Rothstein(University of Pennsylvania), Ossama Khazaal(University of Pennsylvania), David Do(University of Pennsylvania), Sami Al Kasab(Medical University of South Carolina), Line Abdul Rahman(Medical University of South Carolina), Eva Mistry(Twitter (United States)), Deborah Kerrigan(Vanderbilt University), Hayden Lafever(Vanderbilt University), Thanh N. Nguyen(Boston University), Piers Klein(Boston University), Hugo J. Aparicio(Boston University), Jennifer Frontera(Faculty of 1000 (United States)), Lindsey Kuohn(Faculty of 1000 (United States)), Shashank Agarwal(New York University), Christoph Stretz(Norwegian Womens Public Health Association), Narendra Kala(Norwegian Womens Public Health Association), Sleiman El Jamal(Norwegian Womens Public Health Association), Alison Chang(Norwegian Womens Public Health Association), Shawna Cutting(Norwegian Womens Public Health Association), Han Xiao(University of California, Santa Barbara), Adam de Havenon(Yale Cancer Center), Varsha Muddasani(University of Utah), Teddy Y. Wu(Christchurch Hospital), Duncan Wilson(Christchurch Hospital), Amre Nouh(Hartford Hospital), Syed Daniyal Asad(Hartford Hospital), Abid Qureshi(University of Kansas), Justin Moore(University of Kansas), Pooja Khatri, Yasmin Aziz(Yorkshire Ambulance Service NHS Trust), Bryce Casteigne(Twitter (United States)), Muhib Khan(Spectrum Health), Yao Cheng(Spectrum Health), Brian Mac Grory(Duke University), Martin Weiss(Duke University), Dylan Ryan(Duke University), Maria Cristina Vedovati(University of Perugia), Maurizio Paciaroni(MultiMedica), James E. Siegler(Cooper University Hospital), Scott Kamen(Cooper University Hospital), Siyuan Yu(Cooper University Hospital), Christopher R. Leon Guerrero(George Washington University), Eugenie Atallah(George Washington University), Gian Marco De Marchis(University Hospital of Basel), Alex Brehm(University Hospital of Basel), Tolga Dittrich(University Hospital of Basel), Marios Psychogios(University Hospital of Basel), Ronald Alvarado-Dyer(University of Illinois Chicago), Tareq Kass‐Hout(University of Chicago), Shyam Prabhakaran(University of Illinois Chicago), T Honda(Twitter (United States)), David S. Liebeskind(Twitter (United States)), Karen L. Furie(Norwegian Womens Public Health Association)
Stroke
February 10, 2022
Cited by 148Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

Background: A small randomized controlled trial suggested that dabigatran may be as effective as warfarin in the treatment of cerebral venous thrombosis (CVT). We aimed to compare direct oral anticoagulants (DOACs) to warfarin in a real-world CVT cohort. Methods: This multicenter international retrospective study (United States, Europe, New Zealand) included consecutive patients with CVT treated with oral anticoagulation from January 2015 to December 2020. We abstracted demographics and CVT risk factors, hypercoagulable labs, baseline imaging data, and clinical and radiological outcomes from medical records. We used adjusted inverse probability of treatment weighted Cox-regression models to compare recurrent cerebral or systemic venous thrombosis, death, and major hemorrhage in patients treated with warfarin versus DOACs. We performed adjusted inverse probability of treatment weighted logistic regression to compare recanalization rates on follow-up imaging across the 2 treatments groups. Results: Among 1025 CVT patients across 27 centers, 845 patients met our inclusion criteria. Mean age was 44.8 years, 64.7% were women; 33.0% received DOAC only, 51.8% received warfarin only, and 15.1% received both treatments at different times. During a median follow-up of 345 (interquartile range, 140–720) days, there were 5.68 recurrent venous thrombosis, 3.77 major hemorrhages, and 1.84 deaths per 100 patient-years. Among 525 patients who met recanalization analysis inclusion criteria, 36.6% had complete, 48.2% had partial, and 15.2% had no recanalization. When compared with warfarin, DOAC treatment was associated with similar risk of recurrent venous thrombosis (aHR, 0.94 [95% CI, 0.51–1.73]; P =0.84), death (aHR, 0.78 [95% CI, 0.22–2.76]; P =0.70), and rate of partial/complete recanalization (aOR, 0.92 [95% CI, 0.48–1.73]; P =0.79), but a lower risk of major hemorrhage (aHR, 0.35 [95% CI, 0.15–0.82]; P =0.02). Conclusions: In patients with CVT, treatment with DOACs was associated with similar clinical and radiographic outcomes and favorable safety profile when compared with warfarin treatment. Our findings need confirmation by large prospective or randomized studies.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis