Thrombosis Research Unit, Department of Medicine I, Division Hematology, University Hospital "Carl Gustav Carus" Dresden, Fetscherstrasse 74; D-01307 Dresden, Germany.
Thrombosis Research Unit, Department of Medicine I, Division Hematology, University Hospital "Carl Gustav Carus" Dresden, Fetscherstrasse 74; D-01307 Dresden, Germany; Kings Thrombosis Service, Department of Hematology, Kings College London, London, UK.
Int J Cardiol. 2018 Jul 1;262:85-91. doi: 10.1016/j.ijcard.2018.03.060. Epub 2018 Mar 14.
Direct acting non-Vitamin K antagonist oral anticoagulants (NOAC) are characterized by a fixed dosing regimen. Despite the potential for relative underdosing due to large distribution volumes, dose adjustments for patients with high body mass index (BMI) are not recommended. Since efficacy and safety data in obese patients are scarce, we evaluated the impact of BMI on clinical outcomes in daily care patients treated with NOAC for stroke prevention in atrial fibrillation or venous thromboembolism. Using prospectively collected data from a non-interventional registry, cardiovascular (CV), major bleeding events (MB) and all-cause mortality were evaluated according to BMI classes. All outcome events were centrally adjudicated using standard scientific definitions. Between November 1st 2011 and December 31st 2016, 3432 patients were enrolled into the registry (61.3% rivaroxaban; 20% apixaban; 10.1% dabigatran, 8.6% edoxaban; mean follow-up 998.1 ± 542.9 days; median 1004 days). With increasing BMI (range 13.7-57.2 kg/m), the proportion of patients receiving standard (vs. reduced) NOAC dose increased from 64.7% (underweight) to 78.9% (obesity). Although obese patients had more cardiovascular risk factors compared to normal weight patients, on-treatment rates of clinical outcomes (CV, MB, all-cause-mortality) were lowest in overweight and obese patients. In a large set of real-life NOAC recipients we found no indication that high BMI is associated with inferior NOAC effectiveness or safety, which is in line with recent epidemiological data of a "BMI paradox" that indicates a somewhat protective effect of higher BMI regarding unfavourable outcomes also in patients receiving fixed dose NOAC anticoagulation without dose adjustment for higher BMI.
直接作用的非维生素 K 拮抗剂口服抗凝剂(NOAC)的特点是固定剂量方案。尽管由于分布容积较大,可能存在相对剂量不足的情况,但不建议对高体重指数(BMI)的患者进行剂量调整。由于肥胖患者的疗效和安全性数据有限,我们评估了 BMI 对接受 NOAC 治疗以预防心房颤动或静脉血栓栓塞性卒中的日常护理患者的临床结局的影响。使用非干预性注册研究前瞻性收集的数据,根据 BMI 类别评估心血管(CV)、大出血事件(MB)和全因死亡率。所有结局事件均使用标准科学定义进行中心裁定。2011 年 11 月 1 日至 2016 年 12 月 31 日,该注册研究共纳入 3432 例患者(61.3%利伐沙班;20%阿哌沙班;10.1%达比加群;8.6%依度沙班;平均随访 998.1±542.9 天;中位数 1004 天)。随着 BMI(范围 13.7-57.2kg/m)的增加,接受标准(而非降低)NOAC 剂量的患者比例从 64.7%(体重不足)增加到 78.9%(肥胖)。尽管肥胖患者与正常体重患者相比具有更多的心血管危险因素,但超重和肥胖患者的治疗期间临床结局(CV、MB、全因死亡率)发生率最低。在一组大型的真实世界 NOAC 接受者中,我们没有发现高 BMI 与 NOAC 效果或安全性降低相关的迹象,这与最近关于“BMI 悖论”的流行病学数据一致,该悖论表明,在不根据更高 BMI 调整剂量的情况下,接受固定剂量 NOAC 抗凝治疗的患者中,更高 BMI 可能具有一定的保护作用,也会降低不良结局的发生风险。