1 / 43

COMPREHENSIVE META-ANALYSIS ON ORAL ANTICOAGULANTS FOR THE SECONDARY PREVENTION OF CORONARY ARTERY DISEASE INCLUDING MOR

COMPREHENSIVE META-ANALYSIS ON ORAL ANTICOAGULANTS FOR THE SECONDARY PREVENTION OF CORONARY ARTERY DISEASE INCLUDING MORE THAN 50,000 PATIENTS.

Télécharger la présentation

COMPREHENSIVE META-ANALYSIS ON ORAL ANTICOAGULANTS FOR THE SECONDARY PREVENTION OF CORONARY ARTERY DISEASE INCLUDING MOR

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. COMPREHENSIVE META-ANALYSIS ON ORAL ANTICOAGULANTS FOR THE SECONDARY PREVENTION OF CORONARY ARTERY DISEASE INCLUDING MORE THAN 50,000 PATIENTS Giuseppe Biondi-Zoccai, Antonio Abbate,* Marzia Lotrionte,† Davide Castagno, Claudio Moretti, Filippo Sciuto, Pierluigi Omedè, Gian Paolo Trevi, Imad Sheiban 1University ofTurin, Turin, Italy (gbiondizoccai@gmail.com); *Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond, VA; †CatholicUniversity, Rome, Italy

  2. BACKGROUND • Recurrent events remain frequent among patients with coronary artery disease (CAD), despite current aggressive antithrombotic therapies, which may include antiplatelet and/or anticoagulants agents. • Several trials have appraised the role of oral anticoagulants (in particular phenprocoumon and warfarin) in the secondary prevention of CAD, but with inconclusive results.

  3. AIM OF OUR WORK • We performed a comprehensive systematic review and meta-analysis on the topic within the context of The Cochrane Collaboration. • Our goal was to assess the efficacy and safety of long-term oral anticoagulant treatment in patients with established CAD, ie in the setting of secondary prevention.

  4. METHODS: SEARCH STRATEGY • Potentially eligible studies were searched systematically using BioMedCentral, CHID, CINHAL, The Cochrane CENTRAL register of controlled trials (CENTRAL), PubMed, metaRegister, pre-MEDLINE, and SciMed, without language restrictions. • International experts and pharmaceutical firms were asked regarding uncompleted, unpublished or overlooked studies. • Searches were last updated on March 2008.

  5. METHODS: SELECTION CRITERIA • Inclusion criteria were: 1) enrolment of patients with an established diagnosis of coronary heart disease, 2) randomized allocation, 3) intention-to-treat analysis, 4) treatment with oral anticoagulants for at least 4 weeks, and 5) follow-up of at least 4 weeks. • Exclusion criteria were: 1) equivocal allocation, and 2) incomplete (less than 80%) follow-up within any allocation group (ie losses to pre-specified clinical follow-up 20% or more in any of the study arms).

  6. METHODS: END-POINTS • The primary end-point was the composite of death from all causes, non-fatal myocardial infarction or non-fatal stroke. • Secondary outcomes were: • death (from all causes/due to cardiovascular disease), • myocardial infarction, • stroke (total/unspecified/ischemic/hemorrhagic), • repeat hospitalization for angina, • target coronary lesion revascularization. • The following adverse events were also adjudicated: • bleedings (total/fatal/intracranial/major/minor/unspecified bleeding), • treatment discontinuation. Title>Background>Aim>Methods 6

  7. METHODS: COMPARISONS AND DATA ANALYSES • The comparisons of interest were: • oral anticoagulants versus placebo (in the absence of other antithrombotic drugs), • oral anticoagulants alone versus antiplatelet treatment, • oral anticoagulants plus antiplatelet treatment versus oral anticoagulants alone, • oral anticoagulants plus antiplatelet treatment versus antiplatelet treatment alone, • head-to-head comparisons of different oral anticoagulants. • Odds ratios (OR) were computed at the longest available person-years of follow-up. • Heterogeneity analysis was performed using a Cochran Q test. Title>Background>Aim>Methods 7

  8. REVIEW PROFILE

  9. OVERALL RESULTS • A total of 61 randomized controlled trials were retrieved, including 57,983 patients. • Sample size was highly variable, ranging from 50 to 8803 patients, with a median of 284. • Most studies focused on the secondary prevention following myocardial infarction (31 trials including 42576 patients), or recent unstable coronary artery disease (11 trials including 5437 patients). • Other common topics were secondary prevention following coronary artery bypass grafting (11 trials including 4365) or percutaneous coronary intervention (8 trials including 4816 patients). Title>Background>Aim>Methods>Results 9

  10. OVERALL RESULTS • Treatment regimens were also highly variable, with several types of oral anticoagulants, intensity of anticoagulation, duration of treatment and control therapy. Oral anti-vitamin K agents were used in all studies but 2. • Earlier studies employed more frequently high intensity regimens (target INR equivalent>3.0) in comparison to no antithrombotic therapy, whereas recent studies compared moderate intensity regimens based on warfarin (INR 2.0-3.0) plus aspirin versus aspirin alone. • In no instance oral anticoagulants plus aspirin was compared to dual antiplatelet therapy (the current standard of care following acute coronary syndromes) Title>Background>Aim>Methods>Results 10

  11. EXCERPT OF INCLUDED STUDIES Title>Background>Aim>Methods>Results 11

  12. EXCERPT FROM FOREST PLOTS: PRIMARY END-POINT Study Oral anticoagulants Control Rx OR (random) OR (random) or sub-category n/N n/N 95% CI 95% CI Borchgrevink 1960 1/103 9/100 0.10 [0.01, 0.80] Harvald 1961 64/145 78/171 0.94 [0.60, 1.47] Aspenstroem 1964 46/118 71/113 0.38 [0.22, 0.64] Conrad 1964 14/52 9/34 1.02 [0.38, 2.72] MRC 1964 66/195 122/188 0.28 [0.18, 0.42] Loeliger 1967 10/128 23/112 0.33 [0.15, 0.72] Lovell 1967 39/172 46/178 0.84 [0.52, 1.37] MRC 1969 192/712 240/715 0.73 [0.58, 0.92] Meuwissen 1969 6/68 8/70 0.75 [0.25, 2.29] Sorensen 1969 33/156 49/120 0.39 [0.23, 0.66] VA 1969 153/385 149/350 0.89 [0.66, 1.19] Drapkin 1972 212/745 286/782 0.69 [0.56, 0.86] Breddin 1980 45/320 85/626 1.04 [0.71, 1.54] Sixty Plus 1980 93/439 154/439 0.50 [0.37, 0.67] EPSIM 1982 90/652 107/651 0.81 [0.60, 1.10] McEnany 1982 2/68 6/148 0.72 [0.14, 3.65] Rothlin 1985 3/83 0/83 7.26 [0.37, 142.80] Williams 1986 3/51 7/51 0.39 [0.10, 1.61] WARIS 1990 196/607 291/607 0.52 [0.41, 0.65] Weber 1990 20/113 27/122 0.76 [0.40, 1.44] CABADAS 1993 30/307 73/605 0.79 [0.50, 1.24] ASPECT 1994 319/1700 487/1704 0.58 [0.49, 0.68] IPO-V2 1994 183/2016 255/1970 0.67 [0.55, 0.82] AFTER 1996 75/517 67/519 1.14 [0.80, 1.63] ISAR 1996 13/260 4/257 3.33 [1.07, 10.35] CARS 1997 532/5410 308/3393 1.09 [0.94, 1.27] Post CABG 1997 169/674 234/677 0.63 [0.50, 0.80] OASIS Pilot 1 1998 10/155 4/154 2.59 [0.79, 8.43] OASIS Pilot 2 1998 5/98 13/99 0.36 [0.12, 1.04] STARS 1998 12/550 21/1103 1.15 [0.56, 2.35] BAAS 2001 23/530 30/528 0.75 [0.43, 1.31] OASIS 2001 140/1848 155/1864 0.90 [0.71, 1.15] ASPECT-2 2002 33/657 31/336 0.52 [0.31, 0.87] CHAMP 2002 859/2522 860/2537 1.01 [0.90, 1.13] WARIS-2 2002 424/2424 245/1206 0.83 [0.70, 0.99] ESTEEM 2003 89/1245 68/638 0.65 [0.46, 0.90] LoWASA 2004 466/1649 473/1641 0.97 [0.84, 1.13] HELAS 2006 14/54 11/61 1.59 [0.65, 3.88] Total (95% CI) 27928 24952 0.74 [0.65, 0.83] Total events: 4684 (Oral anticoagulants), 5106 (Control Rx) Test for heterogeneity: Chi² = 165.32, df = 37 (P < 0.00001), I² = 77.6% Test for overall effect: Z = 5.04 (P < 0.00001) 0.1 0.2 0.5 1 2 5 10 Favors anticoagulant Favors control Title>Background>Aim>Methods>Results 12

  13. OVERALL RESULTS • Follow-up was also highly variable, ranging from 1 to 88 months, with a median of 12 months. • Meta-analytic pooling, after a median follow-up of 12 months, showed that oral anticoagulants significantly reduced the risk of death, myocardial infarction or stroke in comparison to control therapy (OR=0.74 [0.65-0.83], p<0.001), as well as death from all causes (p<0.001), myocardial infarction (p<0.001), and stroke (p<0.001), despite an increase in major (p<0.001) and minor bleedings (p<0.001). Title>Background>Aim>Methods>Results 13

  14. SUBGROUPS RESULTS • Stratification for control therapy showed that benefits were maintained when anticoagulants were compared to placebo or standard therapy without any antithrombotic medication (OR for primary end-point=0.60 [0.52-0.70], p=0.05), despite significant increases in bleeding rates (OR=4.68 [3.71-5.89], p<0.001). • Conversely, significant benefits occurred when comparing oral anticoagulants versus oral antiplatelet agents alone only in terms of reduction of stroke risk (OR for primary end-point=0.87 [0.76-1.01], p=0.07, OR for stroke=0.71 [0.60-0.84, p<0.001, OR for major bleeding=1.93 [1.64-2.27], p<0.001). Title>Background>Aim>Methods>Results 14

  15. SUBGROUPS RESULTS • Specifically, moderate-intensity anticoagulation (ie based on an International Normalized Ratio [INR] target between 2.0 and 3.0) appeared critical to minimize bleeding risk and maximize antithrombotic effects: • OR for primary end-point=0.71 (0.53-0.94), p=0.02, • OR for stroke=0.75 (0.54-1.04), p=0.08, • OR for major bleeding=2.79 (2.12-3.68), p<0.001. Title>Background>Aim>Methods>Results 15

  16. ODDS RATIOS FOR PRIMARY END-POINT OA worse OA better Title>Background>Aim>Methods>Results 16

  17. ODDS RATIOS FOR DEATH OA worse OA better 1,000 Title>Background>Aim>Methods>Results 17

  18. ODDS RATIOS FOR STROKE OA worse OA better Title>Background>Aim>Methods>Results 18

  19. ODDS RATIOS FOR MAJOR BLEEDING OA worse OA better Title>Background>Aim>Methods>Results 19

  20. CONCLUSIONS Title>Background>Aim>Methods>Results>Conclusions 20

  21. CONCLUSIONS • Oral anticoagulants significantly prevent adverse events in patients with established CAD in comparison to standard therapy without any antithrombotic medication. Title>Background>Aim>Methods>Results>Conclusions 21

  22. CONCLUSIONS • Oral anticoagulants significantly prevent adverse events in patients with established CAD in comparison to standard therapy without any antithrombotic medication. • Comparisons of oral antiplatelet agents versus oral anticoagulants alone or oral anticoagulants plus oral antiplatelet agents showed conversely that oral anticoagulant therapy can achieve a favorable risk-benefit balance only when subjects with low bleeding risk are selected and INR is maintained between 2.0 and 3.0. Title>Background>Aim>Methods>Results>Conclusions 22

  23. Thanks for your attention!For further slides on these topics please feel free to visit the metcardio.org website:http://www.metcardio.org/slides.html

  24. EXTRA SLIDES

  25. OTHER INCLUDED STUDIES Title>Background>Aim>Methods>Results>Conclusions>Extra slides 25

  26. OTHER INCLUDED STUDIES Title>Background>Aim>Methods>Results>Conclusions>Extra slides 26

  27. OTHER INCLUDED STUDIES Title>Background>Aim>Methods>Results>Conclusions>Extra slides 27

  28. OTHER INCLUDED STUDIES Title>Background>Aim>Methods>Results>Conclusions>Extra slides 28

  29. OTHER INCLUDED STUDIES Title>Background>Aim>Methods>Results>Conclusions>Extra slides 29

  30. OTHER INCLUDED STUDIES Title>Background>Aim>Methods>Results>Conclusions>Extra slides 30

  31. OTHER INCLUDED STUDIES Title>Background>Aim>Methods>Results>Conclusions>Extra slides 31

  32. OTHER INCLUDED STUDIES Title>Background>Aim>Methods>Results>Conclusions>Extra slides 32

  33. OTHER INCLUDED STUDIES Title>Background>Aim>Methods>Results>Conclusions>Extra slides 33

  34. OTHER INCLUDED STUDIES Title>Background>Aim>Methods>Results>Conclusions>Extra slides 34

  35. OTHER SUMMARY DATA Title>Background>Aim>Methods>Results>Conclusions>Extra slides 35

  36. OTHER SUMMARY DATA Title>Background>Aim>Methods>Results>Conclusions>Extra slides 36

  37. OTHER SUMMARY DATA Title>Background>Aim>Methods>Results>Conclusions>Extra slides 37

  38. OTHER SUMMARY DATA Title>Background>Aim>Methods>Results>Conclusions>Extra slides 38

  39. OTHER SUMMARY DATA Title>Background>Aim>Methods>Results>Conclusions>Extra slides 39

  40. FURTHER FOREST PLOTS: DEATH Title>Background>Aim>Methods>Results 40

  41. FURTHER FOREST PLOTS: MI Title>Background>Aim>Methods>Results 41

  42. FURTHER FOREST PLOTS: STROKE Title>Background>Aim>Methods>Results 42

  43. FURTHER FOREST PLOTS: MAJOR BLEEDING Title>Background>Aim>Methods>Results 43

More Related