# Risk of recurrent venous thromboembolism and major bleeding according to risk factor profiles in Asian patients: a subgroup analysis EINSTEIN-Extension and EINSTEIN-CHOICE

**Authors:** Norikazu Yamada, Weiguo Fu, Zhenyu Shi, Ki-Hyuk Park, Hyo-Soo Kim, Xiangchen Dai, Anthonie WA Lensing, Akos F Pap, Tomoko Kohno, Tsubasa Tajima, Tadashi Watakabe, Tomoyuki Mitsumori

PMC · DOI: 10.1186/s12959-024-00609-4 · 2024-06-06

## TL;DR

This study finds that rivaroxaban is effective and safe for extended treatment of VTE in Asian patients, particularly those with unprovoked VTE.

## Contribution

The study provides risk profiles for VTE recurrence and bleeding in Asian patients, a group less studied in prior research.

## Key findings

- Rivaroxaban significantly reduced VTE recurrence compared to aspirin and placebo in patients with unprovoked VTE.
- No VTE recurrence was observed in patients with VTE provoked by major or minor transient risk factors.
- Rivaroxaban did not significantly increase the risk of major bleeding.

## Abstract

Risks of recurrence and major bleeding with extended anticoagulation in Asian patients with venous thromboembolism (VTE) are similar to those in non-Asian patients but risks according to baseline risk factor profiles is not well documented.

Subgroup analysis of two randomized trials, which compared once-daily rivaroxaban (20 mg or 10 mg) with placebo or aspirin (100 mg) for extended treatment in Asian patients with VTE who had completed 6–12 months of anticoagulation. Index events were classified as unprovoked, provoked by major persistent risk factors, minor persistent risk factors, minor transient risk factors, or major transient risk factors. One-year cumulative risks of recurrent VTE were calculated for these risk factor profiles.

367 patients received rivaroxaban, 159 aspirin, and 48 placebo. For patients with unprovoked VTE, one-year cumulative incidences of recurrence in the 202 patients given rivaroxaban, the 89 given aspirin and the 28 given placebo were 1.6%, 5.8%, and 14.8%, respectively. For patients with VTE provoked by minor persistent risk factors, these incidences were 0% in the 74 patients given rivaroxaban, 9.3% in the 36 given aspirin, and 0% in the 12 given placebo. No recurrent VTE occurred in patients with VTE provoked by major persistent or transient risk factors or minor transient risk factors. Rivaroxaban was not associated with a significant increase in major bleeding.

Rivaroxaban seems to be an effective and safe option for extended treatment in Asian patients, especially those presenting with unprovoked VTE. Subgroups of patients with provoked risk factors were too small to draw meaningful conclusions.

NCT00439725 and NCT02064439.

## Linked entities

- **Chemicals:** rivaroxaban (PubChem CID 6433119), aspirin (PubChem CID 2244)
- **Diseases:** venous thromboembolism (MONDO:0005399)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** bleeding (MESH:D006470), VTE (MESH:D054556)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Figures

1 figure with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11155148/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11155148