Patients undergoing lower extremity revascularization: How can atherothrombotic risk be reduced?
Patient case: Reducing risk of ischaemic events after revascularization
- Roberto is 72 years old. He has recently retired after working in a bank for 28 years and has been smoking since his early 30s
- For the past few years, Roberto has been suffering from pain in his legs, which he considered to be a sign of ageing
- Despite his wife’s insistence, Roberto refused to seek help. However, a few weeks ago, his pain became so serious that he could no longer walk, which finally prompted Roberto to visit his primary care physician
- The physician referred Roberto to a vascular specialist who determined that Roberto’s pain was caused by severe arterial occlusion resulting from peripheral arterial disease (PAD)
- Roberto underwent surgical revascularization of the superficial femoral artery in his leg
The surgery was a success, but what else can be done to protect Roberto?
Revascularization alone might not be enough
Unfortunately, ignoring the symptoms of lower limb ischaemia will not make the pain go away. As many as 1 in 20 patients suffering from PAD-induced claudication experience a worsening of their lower limb pain within 2 years, with a similar number of these patients requiring a peripheral angioplasty or stenting over the same timeframe.
Furthermore, patients like Roberto will often need another procedure, given that 1 in 7 patients who have already undergone a revascularization procedure will require a re‑intervention within 2 years.1 Revascularization has also been associated with increased risks of acute limb ischaemia and major amputation.2 This risk suggests that patients undergoing revascularization will require enhanced protection from ischaemic events.
Patients following revascularization are at a high risk of needing re-intervention1
Dual pathway inhibition can reduce the risk of thrombotic vascular events in patients undergoing revascularization
Although the need for enhanced protection from ischaemic events in patients like Roberto is clear, there is a clinical uncertainty surrounding antithrombotic treatment in patients with symptomatic PAD.3 However, recent data from the VOYAGER PAD study have shown that dual pathway inhibition with rivaroxaban vascular dose 2.5 mg twice daily (bid) plus low-dose aspirin may offer a new option for antithrombotic therapy for patients with PAD after revascularization.
VOYAGER PAD was an international, phase III, randomized, placebo‑controlled, double‑blind clinical trial.4 It evaluated the efficacy and safety of rivaroxaban 2.5 mg bid plus aspirin compared with aspirin alone in patients with symptomatic PAD undergoing lower-extremity peripheral revascularization. The study recruited 6564 patients with a history of symptomatic PAD who had undergone a lower-extremity peripheral revascularization within 10 days before the treatment initiation. Of these patients, 3286 received rivaroxaban 2.5 mg bid plus aspirin and 3278 received aspirin alone. Clopidogrel was administered per investigators’ discretion.
Rivaroxaban 2.5 mg bid plus aspirin was associated with a significant 15% risk reduction in the primary outcome (composite of myocardial infarction, ischaemic stroke, cardiovascular death, acute limb ischaemia and major amputation of vascular aetiology) compared with aspirin alone (19.9% vs 17.3%; HR=0.85; 95% CI 0.76–0.96; p=0.0085). This represents a clear benefit in reducing the risk of major cardiovascular and limb events in this high-risk patient group.
Importantly, no statistically significant difference in TIMI major bleeding was observed between the two study arms (HR=1.43; 95% CI 0.97–2.10; p=0.0695).5
Primary efficacy outcome and safety outcome in VOYAGER PAD trial5
Summary
The results of VOYAGER PAD complement those of the COMPASS trial, in which rivaroxaban 2.5 mg bid plus aspirin reduced the risk of atherothrombotic events in patients with chronic PAD compared with aspirin.6
What does that mean for patients like Roberto? Previously, there was a lack of evidence-based treatment regimens to protect him from devastating cardiovascular and limb events. However, following VOYAGER PAD, there is compelling new evidence that dual pathway inhibition is an effective treatment option for patients with a recent lower-extremity revascularization. Therefore, dual pathway inhibition can continue to offer protection from atherothrombotic events after the patients have left the surgeons’ care.
External links
References
- Mahoney EM, Wang K, Keo HH et al. Vascular hospitalization rates and costs in patients with peripheral artery disease in the United States. Circ Cardiovasc Qual Outcomes 2010;3:642–651. Return to content
- Baumgartner I et al. J Am Coll Cardiol 2018;72:1563–1572. Return to content
- Anand SS, Caron F, Eikelboom JW et al. Major adverse limb events and mortality in patients with peripheral artery disease: the COMPASS trial. J Am Coll Cardiol 2018;71:2306–2315. Return to content
- Capell WH, Bonaca MP, Nehler MR et al. Rationale and design for the Vascular Outcomes study of ASA along with rivaroxaban in endovascular or surgical limb revascularization for peripheral artery disease (VOYAGER PAD). Am Heart J 2018;199:83–91. Return to content
- Bonaca MP, Bauersachs RM, Anand SS et al. Rivaroxaban in peripheral artery disease after revascularization. N Eng J Med 2020: doi:10.1056/NEJMoa2000052. Bonaca MP, Bauersachs RM, Anand SS et al. Rivaroxaban in peripheral artery disease after revascularization. N Eng J Med 2020: doi:10.1056/NEJMoa2000052. Return to content
- Anand SS, et al. Lancet. 2018;391:219-29. Return to content