Low-dose rivaroxaban (2.5 mg twice daily) provides vascular protection beyond traditional strategies in patients with atherothrombotic cardiovascular disease by reducing platelet-related events.
Does low-dose rivaroxaban (2.5 mg twice daily) reduce residual cardiovascular risk in patients with atherothrombotic cardiovascular disease?
Low-dose rivaroxaban provides mechanistic vascular protection beyond traditional strategies in patients with atherothrombotic CVD, addressing residual risk.
Major cardiovascular (CV) events often complicate the natural history of apparently stable atherothrombotic cardiovascular disease (CVD) despite appropriate guideline-based preventive treatment. This finding has been termed residual risk and it has been the focus of recent investigation. New and revisited targets to tackle this so-called residual risk have been proposed, including antithrombotic treatment intensification, further lowering targets of low-density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol, novel oral antidiabetic agents with a CV benefit, and drugs to reduce systemic inflammation. In this narrative review, we discuss the evidence, mechanisms and gaps in knowledge concerning the vascular protection derived from low-dose (2.5 mg twice daily) rivaroxaban. On this topic, the main trials (ATLAS ACS 2-TIMI 51, COMPASS and VOYAGER PAD), will be summarized in a comprehensive manner. Indeed, these have shown that a drug developed to prevent thrombus formation (selective Factor Xa inhibition) reduced events that were traditionally platelet-related in concept. Moreover, we propose a simple evidence-based clinically oriented algorithm to thoroughly identify patients at increased risk and who may benefit from this strategy in different clinical scenarios. Low-dose rivaroxaban portrays a novel promising era in atherothrombotic CVD prevention, providing a mechanistic protection beyond traditional strategies in patients overwhelmed by recurrent dismal events.
Rocha et al. (Mon,) conducted a review in Atherothrombotic cardiovascular disease. Rivaroxaban was evaluated. Low-dose rivaroxaban (2.5 mg twice daily) provides vascular protection beyond traditional strategies in patients with atherothrombotic cardiovascular disease by reducing platelet-related events.
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