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Aspirin, Warfarin, or Enoxaparin Thromboprophylaxis in Patients With Multiple Myeloma Treated With Thalidomide: A Phase III, Open-Label, Randomized Trial

Authors :
Claudia Crippa
Alessandra Romano
Michele Cavo
Francesca Elice
Roberto Marasca
Mario Boccadoro
Massimo Offidani
Renato Zambello
Claudia Cellini
Valeria Magarotto
Vincenzo Callea
Monica Galli
Claudia Polloni
Patrizia Tosi
Angelo Michele Carella
Giulia Benevolo
Elena Zamagni
Andrea Evangelista
Fabiana Gentilini
Stefano Pulini
Antonio Palumbo
Vittorio Montefusco
Sara Bringhen
Chiara Nozzoli
Davide Rossi
Norbert Pescosta
Roberto Ria
Paola Tacchetti
Francesca Patriarca
Luca Baldini
Tommaso Caravita
Fortunato Morabito
Palumbo A.
Cavo M.
Bringhen S.
Zamagni E.
Romano A.
Patriarca F.
Rossi D.
Gentilini F.
Crippa C.
Galli M.
Nozzoli C.
Ria R.
Marasca R.
Montefusco V.
Baldini L.
Elice F.
Callea V.
Pulini S.
Carella A.M.
Zambello R.
Benevolo G.
Magarotto V.
Tacchetti P.
Pescosta N.
Cellini C.
Polloni C.
Evangelista A.
Caravita T.
Morabito F.
Offidani M.
Tosi P.
Boccadoro M.
Source :
Journal of Clinical Oncology. 29:986-993
Publication Year :
2011
Publisher :
American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO), 2011.

Abstract

Purpose In patients with myeloma, thalidomide significantly improves outcomes but increases the risk of thromboembolic events. In this randomized, open-label, multicenter trial, we compared aspirin (ASA) or fixed low-dose warfarin (WAR) versus low molecular weight heparin (LMWH) for preventing thromboembolism in patients with myeloma treated with thalidomide-based regimens. Patients and Methods A total of 667 patients with previously untreated myeloma who received thalidomide-containing regimens and had no clinical indication or contraindication for a specific antiplatelet or anticoagulant therapy were randomly assigned to receive ASA (100 mg/d), WAR (1.25 mg/d), or LMWH (enoxaparin 40 mg/d). A composite primary end point included serious thromboembolic events, acute cardiovascular events, or sudden deaths during the first 6 months of treatment. Results Of 659 analyzed patients, 43 (6.5%) had serious thromboembolic events, acute cardiovascular events, or sudden death during the first 6 months (6.4% in the ASA group, 8.2% in the WAR group, and 5.0% in the LMWH group). Compared with LMWH, the absolute differences were +1.3% (95% CI, −3.0% to 5.7%; P = .544) in the ASA group and +3.2% (95% CI, −1.5% to 7.8%; P = .183) in the WAR group. The risk of thromboembolism was 1.38 times higher in patients treated with thalidomide without bortezomib. Three major (0.5%) and 10 minor (1.5%) bleeding episodes were recorded. Conclusion In patients with myeloma treated with thalidomide-based regimens, ASA and WAR showed similar efficacy in reducing serious thromboembolic events, acute cardiovascular events, and sudden deaths compared with LMWH, except in elderly patients where WAR showed less efficacy than LMWH.

Details

ISSN :
15277755 and 0732183X
Volume :
29
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Clinical Oncology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....10aaae7aa43cd797d92d93df9cdbdcd9