SAN DIEGO–A cardiologist/vascular medicine specialist urged hematologist and oncologists within the US Department of Veterans Affairs system to think beyond the guidelines–at least until they’re updated–when they consider how to treat peripheral artery disease (PAD).
The 2016 American College of Cardiology/American Heart Association guidelines for PAD care are due for an update and don’t reflect recent positive research into the role that the blood thinner rivaroxaban can play in certain patients, said Geoffrey Barnes, MD, MSc, of the University of Michigan Health System, in a presentation here at the annual meeting of the Association of VA Hematology/Oncology (AVAHO).
Recent research has “really got us excited about the potential for this drug in this particular patient population,” Barnes said, although he cautioned that it’s most appropriate for patients at highest risk of PAD.
Research has found that patients with PAD are more likely to develop cancer, apparently because of common risk factors, and there’s discussion about whether they should undergo special screening. Cancer treatment may also boost the risk of PAD, according to a 2021 US study that tracked 248 patients with both breast cancer and PAD. “Of all patients, 48% were on statins and 54% were on antiplatelet therapies,” the study found, although the 2016 guidelines recommend both (statins for all patients with PAD, antiplatelets for those with symptoms).
In his presentation, Barnes noted that the 2016 guidelines specifically recommend aspirin (75-325 mg daily) or clopidogrel (75 mg) in patients with symptomatic PAD. Treatment is especially important, he said, because the risk of cardiovascular mortality in PAD is high. A 2020 study found that 9.1% of 13,885 patients died over a median 30-month follow-up.
The good news about treatment Brand said, came in a 2020 industry-funded study of patients with PAD who had undergone revascularization. Various outcomes such as amputation, heart attack, and death from cardiovascular causes—the primary efficacy outcome—were less common in subjects who took 2.5 mg twice daily of rivaroxaban plus aspirin or placebo plus aspirin (hazard ratio, 0.85, 95% CI, 0.76-0.96; P = .009).
So who should go on rivaroxaban? As Brand noted, a 2019 study found that patients with no high-risk features didn’t benefit much in terms of risk of vascular events, but those with high-risk features did. In higher-risk patients, the study found, “rivaroxaban and aspirin prevented 33 serious vascular events, whereas in lower-risk patients, rivaroxaban and aspirin treatment led to the avoidance of 10 events per 1,000 patients treated for 30 months.”
Per the study, patients at higher risk are those with heart failure, at least 2 vascular beds affected, renal insufficiency, or diabetes.
Brand supports the use of rivaroxaban in these patients. However, he cautioned colleagues not to switch out the drug with apixaban, another blood thinner. “These are not interchangeable,” he said. “You do need to stick with rivaroxaban. And you do need to remember that you’re going to use 2.5 milligrams twice a day—very different than many of the other ways we are using rivaroxaban.”
Brand discloses consulting fees (Pfizer/Bristol-Myers Squib, Janssen, Acelis Connected Health, Boston Scientific, Abbott Vascular), grant funding (Boston Scientific) and board of directors service (Anticoagulation Forum).