Milvexian vs apixaban for stroke prevention in atrial fibrillation: The LIBREXIA atrial fibrillation trial rationale and design.

Journal: American Heart Journal
Published:
Abstract

Background: Direct oral anticoagulants are the standard of care for stroke prevention in eligible patients with atrial fibrillation and atrial flutter; however, bleeding remains a significant concern, limiting their use. Milvexian is an oral Factor XIa inhibitor that may offer similar anticoagulant efficacy with less bleeding risk.

Methods: LIBREXIA AF (NCT05757869) is a global phase III, randomized, double-blind, parallel-group, event-driven trial to compare milvexian with apixaban in participants with atrial fibrillation or atrial flutter. Participants are randomly assigned to milvexian 100 mg or apixaban (5 mg or 2.5 mg per label indication) twice daily. The primary efficacy objective is to evaluate if milvexian is noninferior to apixaban for the prevention of stroke and systemic embolism. The principal safety objective is to evaluate if milvexian is superior to apixaban in reducing the endpoint of International Society of Thrombosis and Hemostasis (ISTH) major bleeding events and the composite endpoint of ISTH major and clinically relevant nonmajor (CRNM) bleeding events. In total, 15,500 participants from approximately 1,000 sites in over 30 countries are planned to be enrolled. They will be followed until both 430 primary efficacy outcome events and 530 principal safety events are observed, which is estimated to take approximately 4 years.

Conclusions: The LIBREXIA AF study will determine the efficacy and safety of the oral Factor XIa inhibitor milvexian compared with apixaban in participants with either atrial fibrillation or atrial flutter. Background: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT05757869.

Authors
Sneha Jain, Kenneth Mahaffey, Karen Pieper, Wataru Shimizu, Tatjana Potpara, Christian Ruff, Hooman Kamel, Basil Lewis, Jan Cornel, Peter Kowey, Jay Horrow, John Strony, Alexei Plotnikov, Danshi Li, Stephen Weng, Julia Donahue, C Gibson, P Steg, Roxana Mehran, Jeffrey Weitz, S Johnston, Graeme Hankey, Robert Harrington, Carolyn S Lam
Relevant Conditions

Atrial Fibrillation, Stroke