PLoS ONE (Jan 2024)

Safety profile of rivaroxaban in first-time users treated for venous thromboembolism in four European countries.

  • Ana Ruigómez,
  • Tania Schink,
  • Annemarie Voss,
  • Ron M C Herings,
  • Elisabeth Smits,
  • Karin Swart-Polinder,
  • Yanina Balabanova,
  • Gunnar Brobert,
  • Kiliana Suzart-Woischnik,
  • Luis Alberto García Rodríguez

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0298596
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 19, no. 3
p. e0298596

Abstract

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BackgroundThe European rivaroxaban post-authorization safety study evaluated bleeding risk among patients initiated on rivaroxaban or vitamin K antagonists for the treatment and secondary prevention of venous thromboembolism in routine clinical practice.MethodsCohorts were created using electronic healthcare databases from the UK, the Netherlands, Germany and Sweden. Patients with a first prescription of rivaroxaban or vitamin K antagonist during the period from December 2011 (in the UK, January 2012) to December 2017 (in Germany, December 2016) for venous thromboembolism indication, with no record of atrial fibrillation or recent cancer history, were observed until the occurrence of each safety outcome (hospitalization for intracranial, gastrointestinal, urogenital or other bleeding), death or study end (December 2018; in Germany, December 2017). Crude incidence rates of each outcome per 100 person-years were computed.ResultsOverall, 44 737 rivaroxaban and 45 842 vitamin K antagonist patients were enrolled, mean age, 59.9-63.8 years. Incidence rates were similar between rivaroxaban and vitamin K antagonist users with some exceptions, including higher incidence rates for gastrointestinal bleeding in rivaroxaban users than in vitamin K antagonist users. Among rivaroxaban users, mortality and bleeding risk generally increased with age, renal impairment and diabetes.ConclusionsThis study provides further data from routine clinical practice that broadly support safety profile of rivaroxaban for VTE indication and complement findings from previous randomized clinical trials.