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ACC 2003: SPORTIF III and ASCOT

ACC 2003: SPORTIF III and ASCOT. Valentin Fuster MD Director, Cardiovascular Institute Mount Sinai Medical Center New York, NY Christopher Cannon MD Cardiologist Brigham and Women's Hospital Boston, MA James Ferguson MD Associate Director, Cardiology

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ACC 2003: SPORTIF III and ASCOT

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  1. ACC 2003: SPORTIF III and ASCOT Valentin Fuster MD Director, Cardiovascular Institute Mount Sinai Medical Center New York, NY Christopher Cannon MD Cardiologist Brigham and Women's Hospital Boston, MA James Ferguson MD Associate Director, Cardiology St Luke's Episcopal Hospital and Texas Heart Institute Houston, TX Michael Weber MD Professor of Medicine SUNY Downstate College of Medicine Brooklyn, NY

  2. SPORTIF III: Trial design • Oral thrombin inhibitor in atrial fibrillation • 3407 AF patients with at least 1 additional risk factor for stroke • Noninferiority, randomized open-label trial of a fixed dose of ximelagatran (36 mg bid) vs adjusted-dose warfarin with a target INR of 2-3 • End points: combined rates of all strokes, both ischemic and hemorrhagic, and of systemic embolic events between treatments • Primary analysis: intention to treat Secondary analysis: actual treatment received

  3. SPORTIF III: Primary events p=NS p=0.018 ACC 2003

  4. SPORTIF III: Bleeding events ACC 2003

  5. SPORTIF III: Net clinical benefit ACC 2003

  6. SPORTIF III: Shockwaves "[SPORTIF III] probably will send shock waves through the oral antithrombotic world" Gives us something at least as good as warfarin therapy, without all the downside More studies in different conditions will follow Ferguson

  7. SPORTIF III: Changing the landscape "This is really going to change the landscape on how we are going to be dealing with atrial fibrillation" Many physicians are not adept at providing warfarin for AF patients A treatment that is: easier to administerneeds less monitoringseemingly has better results Weber

  8. SPORTIF III: Active treatment "The excitement is that this is an active antithrombotic agent, that it inhibits thrombin directly as opposed to warfarin, which basically depletes the body of clotting factors." Ximelagatran can be initiated early, and the lack of need for INR monitoring eliminates need for very careful follow-up necessary for proper use Cannon

  9. SPORTIF III: Adverse effect ACC 2003

  10. SPORTIF III: Drug-drug interactions We need to learn if there will be interactions with other commonly used drugs "…it's really only when you get up to a 5- or 7-fold increase in liver enzymes that you really have to start worrying about any sort of meaningful damage to liver cells. Three-fold doesn't seem to phase anybody." Weber

  11. SPORTIF III: Liver function enzyme The liver function enzyme rise occurred early, mostly in the first 3 months It may be not require continued monitoring out for an extended period of time You should be aware of it and watch out for it in patients in whom you initiate therapy Ferguson

  12. SPORTIF III: Analogy with statins Some cases of liver-enzyme rise were out to 18 months "To do LFT monitoring is a pretty routine thing that we're used to with statins so I don't think that will limit [ximelagatran use]." Constant effective anticoagulationis less risky for thrombotic events Cannon

  13. SPORTIF III: Coronary artery disease • In long-term follow-up of patients with CAD we see evidence for chronic treatment with clopidogrel and aspirin • CREDO • CURE • It seems oral anticoagulants and aspirin are doing as well as clopidogrel and aspirin if you can control the INR Fuster

  14. SPORTIF III: Long-term CAD treatment • Recurrent MI in SPORTIF III trended higher (p=0.07) • Ximelagatran 1.0% • Warfarin .05% • Ximelagatran + aspirin may be able to compete with clopidogrel + aspirin due to ease of use • High-risk patients may get all 3 Cannon

  15. SPORTIF III: Effects of the drug Antithrombins affect the clotting system, but the thrombin pathway is also a key pathway of platelet activation "It seems to me the drug in itself, even on a theoretical basis, appears to be quite an interesting drug. . . . It seems to me that the potential is incredible for the future." Fuster

  16. SPORTIF III: The next study Data from long-term use of warfarin suggests benefit from prolonged intense antithrombin therapy "My hope would be that we would have the opportunity in the future to do the study that will determine who needs antithrombitic, who needs antiplatelet, and who needs combination therapy." Ferguson

  17. SPORTIF III: Bleeding events As we go from double therapy to triple therapy, we must be careful of bleeding events "The potential for long-term secondary prevention is enormous, but we are going to have to be very careful about monitoring safety here." Weber

  18. SPORTIF III: History • Two problems evolved with hirudin when it was first introduced • Bleeding issues • Rebound: when you stop the drug, all the events begin to occur • We should not forget the history of the field as we move forward Fuster

  19. SPORTIF III: Bleeding Warfarin's variability in anticoagulation intensity may be a source of bleeding problems and these may be avoided by oral antithrombins Ferguson In the 9 trials with antithrombins in the past 2 years, none were stopped for bleeding, which is good news Fuster

  20. SPORTIF III: Expenses • New drugs are very impressive advances in prevention and therapy • ACE inhibitors • Statins • Clopidogrel • Oral antithrombins • Is the expense too much for most of the world? Fuster

  21. SPORTIF III: Cost The costs related to oral antithrombin therapy are not just the costs of the drug but of all the monitoring and adjustments that warfarin required "Yes, we're going to have to deal with the cost issues, but I think that the total effect on the healthcare system is going to be beneficial." Ferguson

  22. SPORTIF III: Real world use SPORTIF III had superb control of INR that you do not see in real-world practice The benefit may be even greater in the real world because the warfarin is less effectively controlled and more bleeding is likely Cannon

  23. SPORTIF III: Trial design aspects • Two bold aspects of this trial are worth noting • Had a per-protocol analysis in addition to intention to treat • Prospective, randomized, open-label blinded end points • These trials are easier, safer, and less expensive, and it is good to see them accepted Weber

  24. SPORTIF III: SPORTIF V SPORTIF V will be a blinded trial in the same sorts of patients "If that turns out to be positive as well, and there's no reason to think that it shouldn't be, that is really going to nail it." Ferguson

  25. ASCOT: Trial design • Lipid-lowering arm of ASCOT trial in hypertension patients • 10 305 hypertensive patients with at least 3 other cardiovascular risk factors and with total cholesterol below 6.5 mmol/L (250 mg/dL) • Randomized to 10-mg atorvastatin or placebo • Primary end point: fatal CHD/nonfatal MI with planned 5-year follow-up • Secondary end points: fatal and nonfatal stroke, total cardiovascular events, and total coronary events

  26. ASCOT: Results Lancet 2003; 361:1149-1158

  27. ASCOT: Cholesterol levels Lancet 2003; 361:1149-1158

  28. ASCOT: Primary prevention • Like a primary prevention trial: • Original cholesterol levels were fairly normal • Patients with multiple risk factors • "You put a statin on top of hypertension and other risk factors and you end up with these very significant and positive results." Fuster

  29. ASCOT: Beyond the guidelines This provides very strong data that lipid-lowering and statin therapy has use beyond current guidelines "Many of these patients are at lower risk for long-term development of cardiovascular disease than are in the current guidelines. So this is a mega result." Cannon

  30. ASCOT: One-size fits all • There was substantial relative benefit, but the absolute benefit was small in terms of number of primary events • 100 in atorvastatin group • 154 in the placebo group • "This is one-size-fits-all therapy that appears to provide benefit." Ferguson

  31. ASCOT: Absolute vs relative risk • Absolute risk reduction in primary event: • 3.4/1000 patient years • In primary prevention, the number of events will be relatively small • Strong relative benefit in these patients will not translate into a strong reduction of absolute events Fuster

  32. ASCOT: Ease of statins A strange reluctance for people to use statins despite their proven ease of use Hopefully the demonstrated benefit for lower-risk patients will help convince higher-risk patients to go on statins Risk stratification for these types of patients will have to determined Cannon

  33. ASCOT: Extends the application All prespecified subgroups benefited from atorvastatin "This extends the potential world of the application of statin therapy. Rather than putting statins in everybody's drinking water right now--that would be great if we could do that but somebody's got to pay for it. " Ferguson

  34. ASCOT: WHO World Health Organization issued a statement in October, 2002 saying the most immediate improvement in CV health would involve getting aspirin and statins to everyone at risk Made possible by generics in statins, bringing cost of the drug combination would cost less than US$14 to treat each person annually Cannon

  35. ASCOT: HPS study • 20 000 patients at increased risk of CHD death due to prior disease • Myocardial infarction or other coronary heart disease • Occlusive disease of noncoronary arteries; or • Diabetes mellitus or treated hypertension Fuster

  36. ASCOT: HPS results Lancet 2002; 360:7-22

  37. ASCOT: Global risk • These patients were also being aggressively treated for their other risk factors • May explain low event rates • Interesting that the cholesterol was low enough to justify a placebo Weber

  38. ASCOT: ALLHAT Trial design • 10 355 patients age >55 with hypertension and 1 additional risk factor and moderate hypercholesterolemia • Randomized to: • pravastatin (40 mg/day, n=15 255) • usual care • Primary end point: all-cause mortality

  39. ASCOT: ALLHAT Primary results JAMA 2002; 288:2998-3007

  40. ASCOT: Hypertension plus • ASCOT is hypertension plus additional risk factors while ALLHAT-LLT was not • "There is your risk stratification right there." • If there had been more patients in ALLHAT maybe you would have seen a result teased out Ferguson

  41. ALLHAT-LLT: Statin use JAMA 2002; 288:2998-3007

  42. ASCOT: Diverging curves The Kaplan-Meier curves separate almost immediately in this study Previously, the curves in long-term populations studies of statins separated after a year "I don't know what the explanation for that very early separation is, but it's encouraging that we're getting an essentially immediate effect." Cannon

  43. ASCOT: All-cause mortality The all cause mortality curves don't separate throughout the trial The stroke curves diverge over time "To make the leap and say that there's something unique about this population where we get instantaneous benefit, I think you need to look at the endpoints that you're looking at." Ferguson

  44. Summary: SPORTIF III Oral antithrombins at a fixed dose are of at least equal benefit as warfarin, with possibly fewer side effects There may be a liver enzyme issue; so far it seems transient and reversible Must wait for SPORTIF V Fuster

  45. Summary: ASCOT Hypertension patients with other risk factors randomized to atorvastatin or placebo Strikingly positive results favoring the statin group The use of statin appears to be meaningful in patients with multiple risk factors without an event Similar to HPS Fuster

  46. EPHESUS N Engl J Med 2003; 348:1309-1321

  47. Coated stents: TAXUS II • Long-term results with the paclitaxel stents in TAXUS II were very good • % MACE at 12 months • Bare stent--21.7 • Slow-release coated stent--10.9 • Moderate-release coated stent--9.9 • "We may have another player emerging into the marketplace in the not-too-distant future." Ferguson

  48. Coated stents:SIRIUS cost analysis Cohen DJ. ACC 2003

  49. Coated stents: Cost effectiveness Coated stents seem essentially cost-neutral, you pay more up front but you recoup that by avoiding expensive hospitalizations down the line This should be very reassuring to all of us that this is a therapy whose early costs are offset by the lack of late costs Cannon

  50. Final word: Weber • I'll be a lot more aggressive in the use of statins • Is it worth measuring cholesterol now in high-risk patients? • Antithrombins will become a dominant force • We need to explain to our administrators the wisdom of an up-front investment in drug-eluting stents Weber

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