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      Efficacy and Safety of a 4-Factor Prothrombin Complex Concentrate in Patients on Vitamin K Antagonists Presenting With Major Bleeding A Randomized, Plasma-Controlled, Phase IIIb Study

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          Abstract

          Background—

          Patients experiencing major bleeding while taking vitamin K antagonists require rapid vitamin K antagonist reversal. We performed a prospective clinical trial to compare nonactivated 4-factor prothrombin complex concentrate (4F-PCC) with plasma for urgent vitamin K antagonist reversal.

          Methods and Results—

          In this phase IIIb, multicenter, open-label, noninferiority trial, nonsurgical patients were randomized to 4F-PCC (containing coagulation factors II, VII, IX, and X and proteins C and S) or plasma. Primary analyses examined whether 4F-PCC was noninferior to plasma for the coprimary end points of 24-hour hemostatic efficacy from start of infusion and international normalized ratio correction (≤1.3) at 0.5 hour after end of infusion. The intention-to-treat efficacy population comprised 202 patients (4F-PCC, n=98; plasma, n=104). Median (range) baseline international normalized ratio was 3.90 (1.8–20.0) for the 4F-PCC group and 3.60 (1.9–38.9) for the plasma group. Effective hemostasis was achieved in 72.4% of patients receiving 4F-PCC versus 65.4% receiving plasma, demonstrating noninferiority (difference, 7.1% [95% confidence interval, −5.8 to 19.9]). Rapid international normalized ratio reduction was achieved in 62.2% of patients receiving 4F-PCC versus 9.6% receiving plasma, demonstrating 4F-PCC superiority (difference, 52.6% [95% confidence interval, 39.4 to 65.9]). Assessed coagulation factors were higher in the 4F-PCC group than in the plasma group from 0.5 to 3 hours after infusion start ( P<0.02). The safety profile (adverse events, serious adverse events, thromboembolic events, and deaths) was similar between groups; 66 of 103 (4F-PCC group) and 71 of 109 (plasma group) patients experienced ≥1 adverse event.

          Conclusions—

          4F-PCC is an effective alternative to plasma for urgent reversal of vitamin K antagonist therapy in major bleeding events, as demonstrated by clinical assessments of bleeding and laboratory measurements of international normalized ratio and factor levels.

          Clinical Trial Registration—

          URL: http://www.clinicaltrials.gov. Unique identifier: [Related object:].

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          0147763
          2979
          Circulation
          Circulation
          Circulation
          0009-7322
          1524-4539
          14 August 2019
          09 August 2013
          10 September 2013
          20 August 2019
          : 128
          : 11
          : 1234-1243
          Affiliations
          University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas (R.S.); Seton/University of Texas Southwestern Clinical Research Institute of Austin, Dell Children’s Medical Center, University Medical Center at Brackenridge, Austin, TX (T.J.M.); University of Rochester Medical Center, Rochester, NY (M.A.R.); CSL Behring LLC, King of Prussia, PA (A.M., B.L.D.); CSL Behring GmbH, Marburg, Germany (A.S.); and Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston (J.N.G.).
          Author notes
          Correspondence to Ravi Sarode, MD, Transfusion Medicine and Hemostasis Reference Laboratory, Department of Pathology, University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, 5323 Harry Hines Blvd, Dallas, TX 75390-9234. ravi.sarode@ 123456utsouthwestern.edu
          Article
          PMC6701181 PMC6701181 6701181 nihpa1042587
          10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.113.002283
          6701181
          23935011
          32040b9c-e22a-4f7e-99bf-52e625683006
          History
          Categories
          Article

          prothrombin complex concentrates,hemorrhage,vitamin K antagonist,plasma,anticoagulants

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