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Wednesday, July 21, 2004
A to Z, SYNERGY Trials: Enoxaparin a Safe, Effective
Alternative to Heparin
By Pat French
The results of two international DCRI trials, the Aggrastat (tirofiban)
to Zocor (simvastatin), or A to Z trial, and the Superior Yield
of the New strategy of Enoxaparin, Revascularization and GlYcoprotein
IIb/IIIa inhibitors, or SYNERGY study, have been published in the
July
7 issue of the Journal of the American Medical Association.
The trials tested different strategies to prevent excess blood
clotting in patients with an acute coronary syndrome (ACS) —
unstable angina, or a heart attack without ST-segment elevation
— who are also receiving tirofiban and aspirin (A to Z) or
who are to have angiography with angioplasty and/or stenting (SYNERGY).
Together, the trials show that the anticoagulant enoxaparin, a small-molecule
heparin, is not inferior to standard heparin in these patients.
The A to Z trial, led by Dr. Mike Blazing and an international
Steering Committee, randomly assigned 3987 patients with ACS to
receive enoxaparin or heparin, plus tirofiban and aspirin, for a
median ~48 hours. Almost half of the patients in both groups went
on to have an angiogram and/or percutaneous coronary intervention,
or PCI, which includes angioplasty and/or stenting. The primary
endpoint — death, heart attack, or persistent ischemia at
7 days — occurred in 8.4% of the enoxaparin group and 9.4%
of the heparin group, which met the study’s criteria for considering
enoxaparin not inferior to heparin.
In the SYNERGY study, led by Dr. Ken Mahaffey and an international
Steering Committee, 10,027 high-risk patients with ACS who were
to have angiography and early PCI, if appropriate, were randomized
to receive enoxaparin or standard heparin at least until after the
PCI (which took place a median 22 hours after enrollment). In all,
14% of the enoxaparin group died or had a heart attack by 30 days
(the primary endpoint), as did 14.5% of the standard heparin group.
This difference, although not statistically significant, did meet
the protocol’s criteria for considering enoxaparin not inferior
to heparin.
With any anticoagulant, the main concern relates to excessive bleeding.
In both trials, the rates of major bleeding were somewhat increased
with enoxaparin versus heparin, significantly so in SYNERGY when
using the bleeding scale from the TIMI trials. The rates of transfusions,
and of bleeding events when using the scale from the GUSTO-I trial,
did not differ significantly by treatment.
|
Bleeding-Related Events in A to
Z and SYNERGY |
| |
A to Z |
SYNERGY |
| |
Enoxaparin |
Heparin |
Enoxaparin |
Heparin |
| TIMI major bleeding |
0.9% |
0.4% |
9.1% |
7.6%* |
| GUSTO-I major bleeding |
— |
— |
2.7% |
2.2% |
| Any bleeding |
3.0% |
2.2% |
— |
— |
| Blood tranfusions† |
1.0% |
0.8% |
17% |
16% |
*P<0.05, or statistically
significant.
†For A to Z, excluding patients who had bypass surgery. |
One reason for the overall higher bleeding rates in SYNERGY, in
both treatment arms, was that many of these high-risk patients had
received an antithrombin drug, which also prevents clotting, before
enrollment. About 10%-12% of the patients also had switched to the
other treatment after they had entered the study. This latter group
had much higher rates of both the primary endpoint (18.5%) and transfusions
(31.5%), although the authors state that more work is needed to
understand how these “crossover” patients might have
affected the study results.
Enoxaparin offers several practical advantages over heparin. First,
it can be given subcutaneously every 12 hours, whereas heparin sometimes
must be given as a continuous intravenous infusion. Second, enoxaparin
treatment does not require the intensive monitoring and dose adjustments
that heparin treatment does. Finally, enoxaparin is also less likely
to cause a potentially life-threatening reaction, heparin-induced
thrombocytopenia, in which the number of platelets, the blood cells
involved in clotting, becomes severely reduced.
On balance, then, both studies indicate that enoxaparin is a safe,
effective alternative to heparin. Its many advantages should be
weighed against the modestly increased risk of bleeding. |
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