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Edoxaban for stroke prevention in atrial fibrillation in routine clinical care: 1-year follow-up of the prospective observational ETNA-AF-Europe study

de Groot, Joris R.; Weiss, Thomas W.; Kelly, Peter; Monteiro, Pedro; Deharo, Jean Claude; de Asmundis, Carlo; Lopez-de-Sa, Esteban; Waltenberger, Johannes; Steffel, Jan; Levy, Pierre; Bakhai, Ameet; Zierhut, Wolfgang; Laeis, Petra; Manu, Marius Constantin;

EUROPEAN HEART JOURNAL-CARDIOVASCULAR PHARMACOTHERAPY
2021
VL / 7 - BP / F30 - EP / F39
abstract
Aims Non-vitamin K oral anticoagulants are safe and effective for stroke prevention in patients with atrial fibrillation (AF). Data on the safety and efficacy of edoxaban in routine care are limited in Europe. We report 1-year outcomes in patients with AF treated with edoxaban in routine care. Methods and results ETNA-AF-Europe is a prospective, multicentre, post-authorization, observational study enrolling patients treated with edoxaban in 10 European countries, the design of which was agreed with the European Medicines Agency as part of edoxaban's post-approval safety plan. Altogether 13 092 patients in 852 sites completed the 1-year follow-up [mean age: 73.6 +/- 9.5 years; 57% male, mean follow-up: 352 +/- 49 days (median: 366 days)]. Most patients had associated comorbidities (mean CHA(2)DS(2)-VASc score: 3.1 +/- 1.4). Stroke or systemic embolism was reported in 103 patients (annualized event rate: 0.82%/year), and major bleeding events were reported in 132 patients (1.05%/year). Rates of intracranial haemorrhage were low [30 patients (0.24%/year)]. Death occurred in 442 patients (3.50%/year); cardiovascular (CV) death occurred in 206 patients (1.63%/year). The approved dosing of edoxaban was chosen in 83%. All-cause and CV mortality were higher in patients receiving edoxaban 30 mg vs. 60 mg, in line with the higher age and more frequent comorbidities of the 30 mg group. Major bleeding was also numerically more common in patients receiving edoxaban 30 mg vs. 60 mg. Conclusion The rates of stroke, systemic embolism, and major bleeding are tow in this large unselected cohort of high-risk AF patients routinely treated with edoxaban.

AccesS level

Gold other, Green accepted, Green published

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