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About
To assess whether edoxaban (60/30 mg daily) compared to non-antithrombotic medical therapy (either no antithrombotic therapy or antiplatelet monotherapy) reduces the risk of stroke (composite of ischemic, hemorrhagic and unspecified stroke) or systemic embolism in high-risk atrial fibrillation (CHA2DS2-VASc ≥2) patients with previous intracranial hemorrhage.
Full description
The EdoxabaN foR IntraCranial Hemorrhage survivors with Atrial Fibrillation (ENRICH-AF) study is a prospective, randomized open-label, blinded end-point (PROBE), investigator-initiated, study that will define the efficacy and safety of edoxaban compared with non-anticoagulant medical therapy (no antithrombotic therapy or antiplatelet monotherapy) for stroke/systemic embolism prevention in high-risk AF patients and previous intracranial hemorrhage. Intracranial hemorrhage includes intracerebral hemorrhage, intraventricular hemorrhage, subarachnoid hemorrhage and subdural hematoma. Recruitment will occur at 250-300 stroke research centres in North and South America, Europe and Asia over 24 months, where 1200 adult participants with high-risk AF (CHA2DS2-VASc score ≥2) and previous spontaneous or traumatic intracranial hemorrhage (while on or off antithrombotic therapy) will be randomly assigned to receive edoxaban 60/30 mg daily or to non-anticoagulant medical therapy (no antithrombotic therapy or antiplatelet monotherapy). Consenting participants will be followed to a common study end-date in this event-driven trial once 123 primary efficacy events (stroke) have accrued; anticipated to be about 12 months after the end of recruitment.
ENRICH-AF will assess the safety and efficacy of anticoagulant therapy in AF participants after intracranial hemorrhage, an area where there currently exists huge interest within the stroke and cardiology research communities. Demonstrating safety comparable with non-anticoagulant medical therapy in AF patients who are particularly at high risk for intracranial hemorrhage is likely to have a more far-reaching clinical impact than solely within the proposed study population. ENRICH-AF will be the "ultimate safety test" of anticoagulation of AF patients, providing reassuring evidence favoring more widespread use of anticoagulation for stroke prevention in AF patients.
Enrollment
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Inclusion criteria
Exclusion criteria
Recent intracranial hemorrhage (within 14 days)
Secondary macrovascular, neoplastic or infectious causes of intracranial hemorrhage (except for antithrombotic treatment or non-penetrating traumatic subdural hemorrhages)
Isolated subarachnoid hemorrhage (convexity or basal); subarachnoid blood tracking onto convexity secondary to an intraventricular hemorrhage or as part of a multicompartment bleed in cases of traumatic subdural hemorrhages are eligible
Need for ongoing oral anticoagulant therapy for indication other than AF (e.g. mechanical heart valve, venous thromboembolic disease)
Need for ongoing antiplatelet therapy for indication where edoxaban would not be a suitable substitute
Plans for left atrial appendage occlusion
Estimated creatinine clearance (CrCl) < 15 mL/min
Platelet count less than 100,000mm3 at enrollment or other bleeding diathesis
Persistent, uncontrolled hypertension (systolic BP averaging >150 mmHg)
Chronic use of NSAID
Clinically significant active bleeding, including gastrointestinal bleeding
Lesions or conditions at increased risk of clinically significant bleeding, e.g. active peptic ulcer disease with recent bleeding, patients with spontaneous or acquired impairment of hemostasis
Antiphospholipid antibody syndrome
Hepatic disease associated with coagulopathy and clinically relevant bleeding risk
Known hypersensitivity to edoxaban
Estimated inability to adhere to study procedures
Pregnancy or breastfeeding
Estimated life expectancy < 6 months at the time of enrollment
Close affiliation with the investigational site; e.g. a close relative for the investigator, dependent person (e.g., employee or student of the investigational site)
Lobar intraparenchymal hemorrhage
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
948 participants in 2 patient groups
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Central trial contact
Amanda Taylor, BSc; Kevin Reeh, MSc
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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