Researchers are looking for a better way to treat people with atrial fibrillation (AF) and prevent stroke or systemic embolism (blood clots travelling through the blood stream to plug another vessel). Atrial fibrillation is a condition of having irregular and often rapid heartbeat. It can lead to the formation of blood clots in the heart which can travel through the blood stream to plug another vessel, and like this lead to serious and life-threatening conditions, such as a stroke. A stroke occurs because the brain tissue beyond the blockage no longer receives nutrients and oxygen so that brain cells die. As strokes arising from atrial fibrillation can involve extensive areas of the brain, it is important to prevent them. Blood clots are formed in a process known as coagulation. Medications are already available to prevent the formation of blood clots. When taken by mouth (orally), they are known as oral anticoagulants (OACs) including apixaban. OACs decrease the risk of the above-mentioned serious and life-threatening conditions. The main side effect of OACs is an increase of the risk of bleeding. The study treatment asundexian is a new type of anticoagulant currently under development to provide further treatment options. Asundexian aims to further improve the standard of care with regard to the risk of bleeding. The main purpose of this study is to collect more data about how well asundexian works to prevent stroke and systemic embolism and how safe it is compared to apixaban in people with atrial fibrillation and at high risk for stroke. To see how well the study treatment asundexian works researchers compare: * how long asundexian works well and * how long apixaban works well after the start of the treatment. Working well means that the treatments can prevent the following from happening: * stroke and/or * systemic embolism. The study will keep collecting data until a certain number of strokes or embolisms happen in the study. To see how safe asundexian is, the researchers will compare how often major bleedings occur after taking the study treatments asundexian and apixaban, respectively. Major bleedings are bleedings that have a serious or even life-threatening impact on a person's health. The study participants will be randomly (by chance) assigned to 1 of 2 treatment groups, A and B. Dependent on the treatment group, the participants will either take the study treatment asundexian by mouth once a day or apixaban by mouth twice a day for approximately 9 - 33 months. Each participant will be in the study for approximately 9 - 34 months. There will be visits to the study site every 3 to 6 months and up to 7 phone calls. Those participants who do not want or are unable to have visits to the study site may join the study remotely in selected locations. The location name contains the abbreviation - DCT in such cases. During the study, the study team will: * take blood samples * do physical examinations * examine heart health using an electrocardiogram (ECG) * check vital signs such as blood pressure and heart rate * do pregnancy tests * ask the participants questions about their quality of life * ask the participants questions about how they are feeling and what adverse events they are having. An adverse event is any medical problem that a participant has during a study. Doctors keep track of all adverse events that happen in studies, even if they do not think the adverse events might be related to the study treatments.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
QUADRUPLE
Enrollment
14,830
Once a day
5 mg or 2.5 mg, twice a day, according to product label.
Placebo to asundexian, once a day
Placebo to apixaban, twice a day
SEC Clinical Research
Dothan, Alabama, United States
Eastern Shore Research Institute, LLC | Fairhope, AL
Fairhope, Alabama, United States
Mobile Heart Specialists, PC
Mobile, Alabama, United States
University of South Alabama Medical Center
Mobile, Alabama, United States
Arkansas Cardiology | Little Rock
Little Rock, Arkansas, United States
Number of Participants With Composite of Stroke or Systemic Embolism
The assessment was based on the cause-specific hazard ratio (csHR), comparing asundexian with apixaban which is based on time to first event. Stroke was defined as an acute episode of focal or global neurological dysfunction caused by an injury of the brain, spinal cord, or retina as a result of hemorrhage or infarction. Systemic embolism is defined as abrupt vascular insufficiency associated with clinical or radiological evidence of arterial occlusion in the absence of other likely mechanisms (this does not include myocardial infarction, thromboembolism of the pulmonary vasculature or venous thrombosis, e.g. pulmonary embolism or deep venous thrombosis).
Time frame: Approximately 12 months
Number of Participants With International Society on Thrombosis and Hemostasis (ISTH) Major Bleeding
Assessment based on the (csHR), comparing asundexian with apixaban which is based on time to first event. ISTH Major Bleeding was defined as an event that meets at least one of the below criteria, based on the definition given by the ISTH (Schulman and Kearon 2005): * Fatal bleeding, and/or * Symptomatic bleeding in a critical area or organ (intracranial, intraspinal, intraocular with compromised vision, pericardial, retroperitoneal, intra-articular, or intramuscular with compartment syndrome), and/or * Clinically overt\* bleeding associated with a recent (within 48 hours) decrease in the hemoglobin level of ≥ 2 g/dL (20 g/L; 1.24 mmol/L) compared with the most recent hemoglobin value available before the event, and/or * Clinically overt\* bleeding leading to transfusion of 2 or more units of packed red blood cells or whole blood. * Overt bleeding required the identification of the bleeding location and the hemoglobin drop and/or transfusion needed to be related to the bleeding.
Time frame: Approximately 12 months
Number of Participants With Composite of Stroke, Systemic Embolism, or ISTH Major Bleeding
The assessment was based on the cause-specific hazard ratio (csHR), comparing asundexian with apixaban which is based on time to first event.
Time frame: Approximately 12 months
Number of Participants With Composite of Ischemic Stroke or Systemic Embolism
The assessment was based on the cause-specific hazard ratio (csHR), comparing asundexian with apixaban which is based on time to first event. An ischemic stroke was defined as the rapid onset (or present on awakening) of a new focal neurological deficit with clinical (\> 24 hours symptoms / signs) or imaging evidence of infarction that is not attributable to a non-ischemic cause (i.e. not associated with infection, tumor, seizure, severe metabolic disease).
Time frame: Approximately 12 months
Number of Participants With All-cause Mortality
The assessment was based on the cause-specific hazard ratio (csHR), comparing asundexian with apixaban which is based on time to first event.
Time frame: Approximately 12 months
Number of Participants With Ischemic Stroke
The assessment was based on the cause-specific hazard ratio (csHR), comparing asundexian with apixaban which is based on time to first event. An ischemic stroke was defined as the rapid onset (or present on awakening) of a new focal neurological deficit with clinical (\> 24 hours symptoms / signs) or imaging evidence of infarction that is not attributable to a non-ischemic cause (i.e. not associated with infection, tumor, seizure, severe metabolic disease).
Time frame: Approximately 12 months
Number of Participants With Cardiovascular (CV) Death
The assessment was based on the cause-specific hazard ratio (csHR), comparing asundexian with apixaban which is based on time to first event. CV death included death due to stroke, myocardial infarction, heart failure or cardiogenic shock, sudden death or any other death due to other cardiovascular causes or CV procedures. In addition, death due to non-traumatic cardiovascular hemorrhage will be included, e.g. non-stroke intracranial hemorrhage, non-procedural or non-traumatic vascular rupture (e.g. aortic aneurysm), or hemorrhage causing cardiac tamponade
Time frame: Approximately 12 months
Number of Participants With Composite of CV Death, Stroke, or Myocardial Infarction (MI)
The assessment was based on the cause-specific hazard ratio (csHR), comparing asundexian with apixaban which is based on time to first event. The diagnosis of MI requires the combination of: * Presence of acute myocardial injury (changes in cardiac biomarkers) and * Evidence of acute myocardial ischemia derived from the clinical presentation, electrocardiographic changes, or the results of myocardial or coronary artery imaging, or in case of post mortem pathological findings irrespective of biomarker values.
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Valley Clinical Trials, Inc. | Covina, CA
Covina, California, United States
Science 37
Culver City, California, United States
University of California, Irvine
Irvine, California, United States
VA Long Beach Healthcare System
Long Beach, California, United States
VA Greater Los Angeles Healthcare System | West Los Angeles VA Medical Center - Cardiology Department
Los Angeles, California, United States
...and 1059 more locations
Time frame: Approximately 12 months
Number of Participants With Composite of ISTH Major or Clinically Relevant Non-major Bleeding
The assessment was based on the cause-specific hazard ratio (csHR), comparing asundexian with apixaban which is based on time to first event. Clinically relevant non-major bleeding was considered any sign or symptom of acute or sub-acute clinically overt bleeding that does not fit the criteria for the ISTH definition of major bleeding, but does meet at least one of the following criteria (based on criteria published by the EMA) (EMA 2014): * requiring medical or surgical treatment by a healthcare professional for bleeding * leading to hospitalization or increased level of care for bleeding * a change in antithrombotic therapy (including study intervention) for bleeding \*Overt bleeding required the identification of the bleeding location.
Time frame: Approximately 12 months
Number of Participants With Clinically Relevant Non-major Bleeding
The assessment was based on the cause-specific hazard ratio (csHR), comparing asundexian with apixaban which is based on time to first event.
Time frame: Approximately 12 months
Number of Participants With Hemorrhagic Stroke
The assessment was based on the cause-specific hazard ratio (csHR), comparing asundexian with apixaban which is based on time to first event. Hemorrhagic stroke was defined as an acute, atraumatic extravasation of blood into the brain parenchyma, intraventricular or subarachnoid space with associated neurological symptoms. This does not include microbleeds or hemorrhagic transformation of an ischemic stroke.
Time frame: Approximately 12 months
Number of Participants With Intracranial Hemorrhage
The assessment was based on the cause-specific hazard ratio (csHR), comparing asundexian with apixaban which is based on time to first event.
Time frame: Approximately 12 months
Number of Participants With Fatal Bleeding
The assessment was based on the cause-specific hazard ratio (csHR), comparing asundexian with apixaban which is based on time to first event.
Time frame: Approximately 12 months
Number of Participants With Minor Bleeding
The assessment was based on the cause-specific hazard ratio (csHR), comparing asundexian with apixaban which is based on time to first event. All other overt bleeding episodes not meeting the criteria for ISTH major or clinically relevant non-major bleeding were classified as minor bleeding (for example, bleeding from a minor wound that does not prompt a treatment for the bleeding, for instance with surgical hemostasis, or epistaxis that does not require a medical treatment for bleeding or a change in antithrombotic therapy).
Time frame: Approximately 12 months
Number of Participants With Composite of Stroke, Systemic Embolism, ISTH Major Bleeding, or All-cause Mortality
The assessment was based on the cause-specific hazard ratio (csHR), comparing asundexian with apixaban which is based on time to first event.
Time frame: Approximately 12 months
Number of Participants With Composite of Disabling Stroke (mRS ≥ 3), Critical Bleeding, or All-cause Mortality
The assessment was based on the cause-specific hazard ratio (csHR), comparing asundexian with apixaban which is based on time to first event. Critical bleeding was defined as symptomatic bleeding in either of the following critical locations (intracranial, intraspinal, pericardial, intra-articular, or retroperitoneal) or as intraocular bleeding with compromised vision or intramuscular bleeding with compartment syndrome.
Time frame: Approximately 12 months