Background: Patients with symptomatic lower-extremity peripheral artery disease (LE-PAD) are prone to serious cardiovascular and limb events. Few studies have evaluated the effect of rivaroxaban-based dual antithrombotic therapy in high-risk patients with LE-PAD in Asian populations.
Objectives: To investigate the efficacy and safety of rivaroxaban-based dual antithrombotic therapy in symptomatic patients with LE-PAD.
Design: Retrospective cohort study.
Methods: This study included patients with LE-PAD treated at the Nanjing Drum Tower Hospital from 1 January 2018 to 31 December 2021. These participants were divided into antiplatelet (APT) or antiplatelet therapy combined with rivaroxaban (RAPT) groups. The efficacy outcomes in this study were the occurrence of major adverse cardiovascular events (MACE), including myocardial infarction, ischemic stroke, or death from cardiovascular causes, and major adverse limb events (MALE), including urgent revascularization, acute limb ischemia, and major amputation. The safety outcomes included major and clinically relevant non-major (CRNM) bleeding. Patients were followed up until the time of death or the end of the study (31 March 2023).
Results: We included 1144 patients with LE-PAD (APT: 502 patients; RAPT: 642 patients). The RAPT group had a lower risk of primary composite efficacy outcomes [hazard ratio (HR): 0.40] and a nonsignificant increase in major bleeding risk (HR: 2.33) than the APT group. The RATP group also had a significantly lower risk of secondary efficacy outcomes, including ischemic stroke (HR: 0.41), myocardial infarction (HR: 0.31), cardiovascular death (HR: 0.40), and MALE (HR: 0.65), than the APT group. The CRNM bleeding incidence varied between the two groups (HR: 3.96). Moreover, no significant interactions were observed between the subgroups and treatment groups in the composite efficacy analysis.
Conclusion: Rivaroxaban-based dual antithrombotic therapy significantly reduced the occurrence of MACE in patients with LE-PAD without increasing major bleeding events. High-risk patients benefited from the dual antithrombotic therapy.
Keywords: dual antithrombotic therapy; efficacy; lower-extremity peripheral artery disease; rivaroxaban; safety.
Comparison of rivaroxaban-based dual antithrombotic and antiplatelet therapies for symptomatic patients with lower-extremity peripheral artery disease post-revascularization: a retrospective cohort study.
Background: Serious cardiovascular and limb events are common adverse effects in patients with symptomatic lower-extremity peripheral artery disease (LE-PAD).Few studies have reported the benefits of dual antithrombotic therapy with rivaroxaban in patients with high risk of LE-PAD in Asian populations.
Methods: We collected data from in-patients with LE-PAD from January 1, 2018 to December 31, 2021.Depending on the antithrombotic medication administered, we classified the patients into antiplatelet therapy (e.g., aspirin and clopidogrel; APT group) and antiplatelet therapy combined with rivaroxaban (RAPT group) groups.The primary efficacy outcome was major adverse cardiovascular events (MACE), which was a composite of myocardial infarction, ischemic stroke or death from cardiovascular causes. The primary safety outcome was major bleeding.Secondary clinical outcomes included myocardial infarction, ischemic stroke, death from cardiovascular causes, clinically relevant non-major (CRNM) bleeding, and major adverse limb events (MALE), including urgent revascularization, acute limb ischemia, and major amputation.Follow-up continued until death or the end of the study (March 31, 2023).
Results: The RAPT group had a lower risk of primary composite efficacy outcome and a non-significant increase in the risk of major bleeding than the APT group.The risk of secondary efficacy was significantly lower in the RAPT group than in the APT groups. The incidence of CRNM bleeding varied between the two groups.The subgroups and treatment groups had no significant interactions with the risk of composite efficacy outcomes.
Conclusions: Rivaroxaban-based dual antithrombotic therapy has a clear therapeutic advantage over single antiplatelet therapy in Asian populations and does not increase the risk of major bleeding.Rivaroxaban-based combination therapy reduces the risk of serious adverse cardiovascular and limb events with an acceptable safety profile.
© The Author(s), 2023.