Research and Practice in Thrombosis and Haemostasis (Mar 2021)

Anticoagulant treatment for venous thromboembolism: A pooled analysis and additional results of the XALIA and XALIA‐LEA noninterventional studies

  • Sylvia Haas,
  • Lorenzo G. Mantovani,
  • Reinhold Kreutz,
  • Danja Monje,
  • Jonas Schneider,
  • Elizabeth R. Zell,
  • Miriam Tamm,
  • Martin Gebel,
  • Jörg‐Peter Bugge,
  • Walter Ageno,
  • Alexander G. G. Turpie

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1002/rth2.12489
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 5, no. 3
pp. 426 – 438

Abstract

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Abstract Background The XALIA and XALIA‐LEA prospective, noninterventional studies investigated the safety and effectiveness of rivaroxaban versus standard anticoagulation for venous thromboembolism (VTE) treatment in routine clinical practice across global regions. Objectives This pooled analysis combined their data to determine the incidence of thromboembolic and bleeding events in both treatment groups and addressed specific bleeding patterns in a broad range of patients. Methods Patients with objectively confirmed VTE and an indication for ≥3 months’ anticoagulation treatment received rivaroxaban or standard anticoagulation (eg, initial treatment with heparin/fondaparinux, followed by a vitamin K antagonist [VKA]). Treatment choice, dose, management, and duration were at the physician’s discretion. Primary outcomes (major bleeding, recurrent VTE, and all‐cause mortality) were compared between the two treatment groups. Propensity score stratification, and matching were used to reduce bias due to confounding variables. Results Overall, 7129 patients were enrolled from 36 countries; 6445 and 2714 patients were included in the propensity score–stratified and –matched analyses, respectively. Major bleeding and incidences of recurrent VTE were similar between treatment groups; all‐cause mortality was lower with rivaroxaban than with standard anticoagulation. The incidences of genitourinary bleeding were higher with rivaroxaban than with standard anticoagulation therapy (46 and 23 events in the matched analysis, respectively). VKA management in real‐world practice was suboptimal. Conclusion XALIA and XALIA‐LEA show similar safety and effectiveness profiles of rivaroxaban and standard anticoagulation for VTE treatment in routine practice in many parts of the world. The observations are consistent with results from the phase III EINSTEIN randomized controlled trials.

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