Background: The optimal antithrombotic strategy early after aortic valve replacement surgery with a biological valve remains controversial due to lack of high-quality evidence. Either oral anticoagulants or acetylsalicylic acid should be considered for the first three months. Hypo-attenuated leaflet thickening on cardiac compute tomography has been associated with latent bioprosthetic valve thrombosis and may be prevented with anticoagulation. The investigators hypothesize that anticoagulation with apixaban is superior to single antiplatelet therapy with acetylsalicylic acid in reduction of hypo-attenuated leaflet thickening of bioprosthetic valves after aortic valve replacement. Methods: In this prospective, open-label, randomized trial patients without an indication for oral anticoagulation undergoing isolated aortic valve replacement surgery with novel rapid-deployment bioprosthetic valves will be randomized. The treatment group will receive 5 mg of apixaban twice a day for the first three months and 100 mg of acetylsalicylic acid thereafter. The control group will have 100 mg of acetylsalicylic acid once a day indefinitely. After the three-month treatment period a contrast enhanced electrocardiogram-gated cardiac computed tomography will be performed to identify hypo-attenuated leaflet thickening of the bioprosthetic valve. The primary objective of the study is to assess possible superiority of the treatment group in the prevention of hypo-attenuated leaflet thickening three months after randomization. Secondary objective is to assess possible noninferiority for safety of apixaban-based strategy when compared to acetylsalicylic acid at three months. Discussion: Antithrombotic therapy after aortic valve replacement surgery is used to prevent valve thrombosis and systemic thromboembolism. Latent bioprosthetic valve thrombosis is a precursor of clinically significant prosthetic valve dysfunction or thromboembolic event. The hallmark feature of latent bioprosthetic valve thrombosis is hypo-attenuated leaflet thickening on cardiac computed tomography. Subclinical leaflet thrombosis occurs frequently in bioprosthetic aortic valves, more commonly in transcatheter than in surgical valves. There is no evidence on the effect of direct oral anticoagulants on the incidence of hypo-attenuated leaflet thickening after surgical aortic valve replacement with rapid deployment bioprostheses.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
SINGLE
Enrollment
166
Patients undergoing first-time isolated aortic valve replacement with a rapid deployment biological prosthesis.
All the study patients will undergo a computed tomography imaging to assess for hypo-attenuated leaflet thickening and reduced leaflet mobility of the biological prosthesis following the three-month treatment period.
All the study patients will undergo a transthoracic echocardiography before hospital discharge and following the three-month treatment period.
University Hospital Center Zagreb
Zagreb, Croatia
RECRUITINGProportion of patients with hypo-attenuated leaflet thickening
Hypo-attenuated leaflet thickening is identified as increased thickness of one or more leaflets of the bioprosthetic valve on contrast-enhanced electrocardiogram gated cardiac computed tomography. Grade 3 on a 4-tier semiquantitative grading scale describes more than 50% and less than 75% of leaflet involvement. Grade 3 or higher of hypo-attenuated leaflet thickening of at least one bioprosthetic valve leaflet will be considered.
Time frame: At the end of treatment at 3 months
Proportion of patients with bleeding, thromboembolic event, or death
The safety composite outcome will be comprised of all types of VARC-3 bleeding events, thromboembolic events (myocardial infarction and stroke), and death from any cause.
Time frame: From enrolment to the end of treatment at 3 months
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