Does apixaban reduce major bleeding compared to warfarin in patients with advanced chronic kidney disease?
In patients with advanced CKD, apixaban is associated with significantly lower major bleeding rates between 6 and 12 months compared to warfarin, without increasing the risk of ischemic stroke or recurrent VTE.
A total of 604 patients were included in the analysis. The percentage of apixaban and warfarin patients with a major bleed at 0 to 3, 3 to 6, and 6 to 12 months were 8.3% versus 9.9% ( P=0.48), 1.4% versus 4% ( P=0.07), and 1.5% versus 8.4% ( P<0.001), respectively. There were no differences in rates of ischemic stroke or recurrent VTE at any time period. Conclusion and Relevance: Patients with advanced CKD taking apixaban had similar bleeding rates at 3 months compared with those taking warfarin. However, those who continued therapy had higher major bleeding rates with warfarin between 6 and 12 months. This study provides knowledge on the effects of a direct oral anticoagulant in a population that was excluded from all major trials.
Schafer et al. (Tue,) studied this question.