Apixaban 2.5 mg b.i.d. in high-risk orthopedic surgery patients resulted in predicted bleeding frequencies (6.85% TKR, 10.3% THR) comparable to the reference population (6.18% TKR, 9.32% THR).
Does high apixaban exposure increase bleeding risk in special populations undergoing orthopedic surgery?
In patients undergoing orthopedic surgery, combined risk factors for high apixaban exposure do not result in a clinically relevant increase in bleeding risk with the 2.5 mg b.i.d. dose.
Population pharmacokinetic (PK) and exposure-response analyses of apixaban were performed using data from phase I-III studies to predict bleeding risks for patients receiving apixaban 2.5 mg b.i.d. after total knee or hip replacement (TKR, THR) surgery (N = 5,510). Renal function, age, gender, and body weight impacted apixaban exposure. Bleeding risk increased as a function of exposure. Predicted bleeding frequencies for TKR and THR populations at risk for high apixaban exposure (female, age > 75 years, calculated creatinine clearance (cCrCL) < 30 ml/min, body weight < 50 kg) (6.85 and 10.3%, respectively) were comparable to the reference population (male/female, age 65-75 years, cCrCL ≥ 80 ml/min, body weight 65-85 kg) (6.18 and 9.32%, respectively). A 100% increase in apixaban exposure is expected to raise bleeding frequencies to 7.25% (TKR) and 10.9% (THR), whereas a 200% increase would raise them to 8.49 and 12.7%. Coexistence of combined patient risk factors or doubling of exposure is not likely to result in a substantial, clinically relevant increase in bleeding risk with 2.5 mg b.i.d. apixaban.
Leil et al. (Mon,) conducted a other in Total knee or hip replacement surgery (n=5,510). Apixaban vs. Reference population (normal exposure risk) was evaluated on Bleeding frequencies. Apixaban 2.5 mg b.i.d. in high-risk orthopedic surgery patients resulted in predicted bleeding frequencies (6.85% TKR, 10.3% THR) comparable to the reference population (6.18% TKR, 9.32% THR).
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