Safety and efficacy of rivaroxaban in pediatric cerebral venous thrombosis (Einstein-Jr CVT)
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Author
Connor, P.van Kammen, M.S.
Lensing, A.W.A.
Chalmers, E.
Kállay, K.
Hege, K.
Simioni, P.
Biss, T.
Bajolle, F.
Bonnet, D.
Grunt, S.
Kumar, R.
Lvova, O.
Bhat, R.
van Damme, A.
Palumbo, J.
Santamaria, A.
Saracco, P.
Payne, J.
Baird, S.
Godder, K.
Labarque, V.
Male, C.
Martinelli, I.
Soto, M.M.
Motwani, J.
Shah, S.
Hooimeijer, H.L.
Prins, M.H.
Kubitza, D.
Smith, W.T.
Berkowitz, S.D.
Pap, A.F.
Majumder, M.
Monagle, P.
Coutinho, J.M.
EINSTEIN-Jr Cerebral Venous Thrombosis trial investigators
Affiliation
University of Arizona, School of Medicine, Phoenix Children's HospitalIssue Date
2020
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American Society of HematologyCitation
Connor, P., Sánchez van Kammen, M., Lensing, A. W., Chalmers, E., Kállay, K., Hege, K., ... & Coutinho, J. M. (2020). Safety and efficacy of rivaroxaban in pediatric cerebral venous thrombosis (EINSTEIN-Jr CVT). Blood advances, 4(24), 6250-6258.Journal
Blood AdvancesRights
Copyright © 2020 by The American Society of Hematology.Collection Information
This item from the UA Faculty Publications collection is made available by the University of Arizona with support from the University of Arizona Libraries. If you have questions, please contact us at repository@u.library.arizona.edu.Abstract
Anticoagulant treatment of pediatric cerebral venous thrombosis has not been evaluated in randomized trials. We evaluated the safety and efficacy of rivaroxaban and standard anticoagulants in the predefined subgroup of children with cerebral venous thrombosis (CVT) who participated in the EINSTEIN-Jr trial. Children with CVT were randomized (2:1), after initial heparinization, to treatment with rivaroxaban or standard anticoagulants (continued on heparin or switched to vitamin K antagonist). The main treatment period was 3 months. The primary efficacy outcome, symptomatic recurrent venous thromboembolism (VTE), and principal safety outcome, major or clinically relevant nonmajor bleeding,were centrally evaluated by blinded investigators. Sinus recanalization on repeat brain imaging was a secondary outcome. Statistical analyses were exploratory. In total, 114 children with confirmed CVT were randomized. All children completed the follow-up. None of the 73 rivaroxaban recipients and 1 (2.4%; CVT) of the 41 standard anticoagulant recipients had symptomatic, recurrent VTE after 3 months (absolute difference, 2.4%; 95% confidence interval [CI], 22.6% to 13.5%). Clinically relevant bleeding occurred in 5 (6.8%; all nonmajor and noncerebral) rivaroxaban recipients and in 1 (2.5%; major [subdural] bleeding) standard anticoagulant recipient (absolute difference, 4.4%; 95% CI, 26.7% to 13.4%). Complete or partial sinus recanalization occurred in 18 (25%) and 39 (53%) rivaroxaban recipients and in 6 (15%) and 24 (59%) standard anticoagulant recipients, respectively. In summary, in this substudy of a randomized trial with a limited sample size, children with CVT treated with rivaroxaban or standard anticoagulation had a low risk of recurrent VTE and clinically relevant bleeding. This trial was registered at clinicaltrials.gov as #NCT02234843. © 2020 by The American Society of HematologyNote
Immediate accessISSN
2473-9529Version
Final published versionae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.1182/bloodadvances.2020003244
