Africa News Line Friday, 03.29.2024, 4:06 PM
Welcome Guest | RSS
Site menu

Main » 2014 » November » 5 » FDA Medicare study in 134,000 atrial fibrillation patients confirms positive safety profile and effectiveness of Pradaxa® in general practic
9:57 AM
FDA Medicare study in 134,000 atrial fibrillation patients confirms positive safety profile and effectiveness of Pradaxa® in general practic

INGELHEIM, Germany - Monday, November 3rd 2014 [ME NewsWire]

    Full results of large-scale FDA Medicare study now published in Circulation reinforce positive safety and efficacy profile of Pradaxa®1
    Study of 134,000 patients demonstrates benefits such as a significantly reduced risk of ischaemic stroke, a threefold lower rate of intracranial bleeding, and a significant survival benefit with Pradaxa® vs warfarin1
    Data are remarkably consistent with RE-LY® study findings, which established the positive benefit-risk profile of Pradaxa® for stroke prevention in AF1-3

(BUSINESS WIRE) -- Non US, Non UK, Non Canadian Media

On October 30, 2014, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) Medicare analysis of 134,000 atrial fibrillation (AF) patients treated with either Pradaxa® (dabigatran etexilate) or warfarin in a general practice setting, was published in Circulation.1 The FDA authors conclude that dabigatran was associated with a significantly reduced risk of ischaemic stroke and intracranial bleeding, a significantly increased risk of major gastrointestinal bleeding and a significant survival benefit compared with warfarin in elderly patients with non-valvular AF.1 The FDA study confirms findings of the RE-LY® study in 18,000 patients, which led to the approval of Pradaxa® for stroke prevention in AF worldwide.1-3

The FDA Medicare analysis is based on patient data from elderly patients enrolled in Medicare.1 The FDA study included patients who started treatment for dabigatran or warfarin for non-valvular AF between October 2010 and December 2012 and were older than 65 years.1

The detailed results of the analysis showed:a

    Fewer ischaemic strokes due to blood clots with Pradaxa® (20 per cent less than with warfarin)
    Fewer intracranial bleeds with Pradaxa® (66 per cent less than warfarin)
    Survival benefit with Pradaxa® (14 per cent better than warfarin)
    No difference in major bleeding between Pradaxa® and warfarin
    No difference in acute myocardial infarction between Pradaxa® and warfarin
    More gastrointestinal bleeding with Pradaxa® (28 per cent more than warfarin)1

The U.S. FDA had already communicated part of its analysis in a Drug Safety Communication on its website in May 2014 and explicitly stated that, “Pradaxa® provides an important health benefit when used as directed.”4

“The results of the U.S. FDA Medicare analysis clearly confirm that the positive safety and efficacy profile observed in the clinical RE-LY® study was also achieved in real world general practice”, commented Professor Jörg Kreuzer, Vice President Medicine Therapeutic Area Cardiovascular, Boehringer Ingelheim. “The results of this study, which is by far the largest of its kind, further reinforce the quality and reliability of RE-LY® study results and the value Pradaxa® can bring to patients with atrial fibrillation at risk of stroke.”

~ENDS~

Please click on the link below for ‘Notes to Editors’ and ‘References’:

http://www.boehringer-ingelheim.com/news/news_releases/press_releases/2014/03_november_2014dabigatranetexilate.html

a In the United States, the licensed doses for dabigatran etexilate are 150mg twice daily and 75mg twice daily for the prevention of stroke and systemic embolism in adult patients with NVAF. This dose of 75mg twice daily is not authorised in Europe for this indication.

Contacts

Boehringer Ingelheim GmbH
Friederike Middeke
Phone: +49 6132 – 77 141 575
Fax: +49 6132 – 77 6601
E-mail: press@boehringer-ingelheim.com
Twitter: http://twitter.com/Boehringer

 

 

 

 

Permalink: http://me-newswire.net/news/12668/en

Views: 197 | Added by: uaeonlinenews | Rating: 0.0/0
Total comments: 0
Search

Entries archive

Calendar