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Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 93-B, Issue SUPP_III | Pages 276 - 276
1 Jul 2011
Fisher WD Gent M Davidson BL Lassen MR Kwong LM Cushner FD Lotke PA Misselwitz F Bandel TJ Turpie AG
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Purpose: Venous thromboembolism (VTE) after major orthopaedic surgery remains an important clinical problem. Convenient, oral antithrombotic agents that are both effective and safe could improve adherence to guidelines for VTE prophylaxis. Recently, the focus has been on the development of oral agents that target a single step in the coagulation cascade and Factor Xa is a pivotal step. Rivaroxaban is an oral, direct Factor Xa inhibitor. Four international phase III trials (the RECORD programme) were undertaken to investigate the safety and efficacy of once-daily rivaroxaban for thromboprophylaxis after major orthopaedic surgery. The results of RECORD3 showed that rivaroxaban was more effective than enoxaparin 40 mg once daily after total knee replacement (TKR), with a 48% risk reduction in VTE and all cause mortality. RECORD4 was designed to determine the efficacy and safety of 10 mg rivaroxaban od compared to 30 mg bid enoxaparin after total knee replacement (TKR).

Method: This study randomized 3148 patients to either rivaroxaban (10 mg od started 6–8 hours after surgery) or enoxaparin (30 mg bid s.c. started 12–24 hours after surgery) for 10–14 days. The primary efficacy outcome was the composite of asymptomatic deep vein thrombosis (DVT) detected by mandatory, bilateral venography and symptomatic DVT, non-fatal pulmonary embolism (PE), and all-cause mortality up to day 13±4. Secondary outcomes included major VTE (composite of proximal DVT, non-fatal PE, and VTE-related death) and symptomatic VTE. Safety outcomes included on-treatment major and non-major bleeding.

Results: Rivaroxaban provided a 31% relative risk reduction in the incidence of the primary efficacy outcome when compared to enoxaparin (6.9% vs 10.1%, respectively; p=0.012). The corresponding rates for major VTE were 1.2% and 2.0%, respectively (p=0.124) and for symptomatic VTE were 0.7% and 1.2%, respectively (p=0.187). There were no significant differences in bleeding incidence observed between rivaroxaban and enoxaparin (major bleeding: 0.7% vs 0.3%, respectively, p=0.110; clinically relevant non-major bleeding: 2.6% vs 2.0%, respectively, p=0.279).

Conclusion: Rivaroxaban 10 mg od is the first oral thromboprophylactic agent to significantly reduce the incidence of VTE after TKR compared to enoxaparin 30 mg bid, with a similar, low rate of bleeding.