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    Study: New drug cuts deaths after heart attack

    ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) — People recovering from a heart attack or severe chest pain are much less likely to suffer another heart-related problem or to die from one if they take a new blood-thinning drug along with standard anti-clotting medicines, a large study finds.

    But this benefit had a cost: a greater risk of serious bleeding, usually in the digestive tract.

    Still, some doctors said the drug, Xarelto, could become a new standard of care for up to a million Americans hospitalized each year for these conditions. A low dose of the drug substantially cut the risk of dying of any cause during the study.

    "Mortality trumps everything," so a drug that improves survival is a win, said Dr. Paul Armstrong of the University of Alberta in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada.

    He had no role in the study, discussed Sunday at an American Heart Association conference in Florida and published online by the New England Journal of Medicine. The study was sponsored by the drug's makers — Johnson & Johnson and Bayer Healthcare — and some researchers work or consult for the companies.

    Xarelto is approved now at higher doses for preventing strokes in people with a common heart rhythm problem and for preventing blood clots after joint surgeries. It works in a different way than aspirin and older blood thinners do.

    Dr. C. Michael Gibson of Harvard Medical School led a study testing it in 15,500 patients around the world who were leaving the hospital after a heart attack or severe chest pain from clogged arteries.

    All were prescribed aspirin and an older blood thinner. One-third also received a low dose of Xarelto, and one-third got a higher dose. After about a year on average, nearly 11 percent of those on just the usual medicines had suffered a heart attack, heart-related death or a stroke versus less than 9 percent of those on either dose of Xarelto.

    The lower dose proved better and safer. Fewer than 3 percent of those getting Xarelto died of any cause during the study, compared with 4.5 percent of those getting just the usual medicines. That translates to a 32 percent lower risk with Xarelto.

    "Our study group has been going for 27 years and we've not seen that" magnitude of benefit from a drug like this, said Dr. Eugene Braunwald of Harvard-affiliated Brigham and Women's Hospital, the study's chairman.

    To prevent a single heart-related death, heart attack or stroke, only 56 people would need to be treated for two years with a low dose of the drug, Gibson said.

    However, serious bleeding was nearly four times more common with Xarelto, including bleeding in the head, a potentially disabling side effect. Fatal bleeding was no greater with Xarelto, though.

    "There's a trade-off" between thinning the blood to prevent clots and raising the risk of bleeding, said Dr. Roger Blumenthal, preventive cardiology chief at Johns Hopkins Medical Center.

    Cost is another issue. Usual care for these patients is changing with newer drugs that have come on the market since this study started. One — ticagrelor, sold as Brilinta in the U.S. and other brands elsewhere — also proved beneficial for similar patients taking just aspirin instead of pricier additional medicines used in the Xarelto study.

    Xarelto's makers will seek approval to sell it for people like those in this study by the end of the year, a Johnson & Johnson spokesman said. A price has not been set, but the higher doses sold now for other purposes run more than $7 a day.

    The good results with Xarelto contrast with the disappointing ones from an experimental blood thinner by Merck & Co., vorapaxar.

    The drug flopped in a key late-stage study aimed at preventing heart attacks, strokes and other problems in people similar to those in the study of Xarelto — hospitalized for a heart attack or severe chest pain from clogged arteries.

    Vorapaxar gave no significant benefit when added to standard medicines in a study of 13,000 patients around the world. It also raised the risk of serious bleeding.

    Merck's senior vice president of cardiovascular research, Dr. Michael Mendelsohn, said results due out early next year from another large study testing vorapaxar in different types of patients will tell more about the drug's potential.

    ___

    Online:

    Heart Association: www.americanheart.org

    New England Journal: www.nejm.org

    ___

    Marilynn Marchione can be followed at http://twitter.com/MMarchioneAP

     
    • Sunland 88  •  Los Angeles, United States  •  6 mths ago
      Going from 4.5% to 3% is not such a big deal, especially when you can die of brain bleeding. What a big pharma press release!
      • John 6 mths ago
        While I agree that these statistics are often misleading, I think it is also worth mentioning that bleeding is a risk of ALL the medications used for this purpose, be it this or the older drugs.
      • Beekman 6 mths ago
        Not a big deal unless you were in the 1.5%
      • Molren 6 mths ago
        That's absolute risk reduction, what really matters is relative risk reduction which is the 32% also reported in the article.
    • DBM290  •  Pleasanton, United States  •  6 mths ago
      Math Lesson:
      $7/day = $2550/year for a single patient.
      1Million potential patients in article = $2.5 BILLION per year.
      .
      Any idea as to why it is a "miracle" drug?
      • jason 6 mths ago
        2550 per year is not bad if it keeps you alive
      • robertw 6 mths ago
        One of the many reason's why there has to be national healthcare.
      • inspirata 6 mths ago
        robert xo
    • 1950  •  Kansas City, United States  •  6 mths ago
      "The study was sponsored by the drug's makers — Johnson & Johnson and Bayer Healthcare — and some researchers work or consult for the companies."

      I'd like to see some independent studies before I'll jump on the bandwagon.
      • Julianna 6 mths ago
        NO ONE NEEDS DRUGS - they need the right food, grown without chemicals, and in the right combination for health. Oh, and we need to breath good air, and drink clean water.
    • Porkskins  •  Norfolk, United States  •  6 mths ago
      A friend of mine's dad died from an bleeding aneurysm while on blood thinning medicine.
      • eddie j 6 mths ago
        Sadly, that is a risk associated with any blood thinning medication.
      • Will 6 mths ago
        I'm sorry for your loss, but keep in mind that for each case in which this happens there are many recurrent and often fatal heart attacks. Cardiologists have been trying to balance the risk of bleeding vs another heart attack for a long time. Replacing warfarin with it's highly variable dosing and need for frequent testing is a giant step in the right direction.
      • SisyphusSyzygy 6 mths ago
        My mother was on blood thinning medication. One day she just started spasming and beating on the floor with her heels. When I got back from the bowling alley, she was worse. So I called an ambulance. It took those guys FOREVER to get there, and as a result she died in the ambulance.
    • C Lloyd  •  Front Royal, United States  •  6 mths ago
      Most of these drugs are researched with donations, government grants, public universities and the National Institute of health. But are always very expensive supposedly because of research and development cost. Just more corporate rape of the people with the help of the government.
      • Weed The Garden! 6 mths ago
        And what ever happened to people and groups doing research just because it would help society? Louis Pasteur even went to jail while trying to help society, so did alot of others who actually DID help this world. Leave them alone and there will be those who still believe that way and who will do something good!
    • Jill  •  6 mths ago
      Saved from the heart attack only to die from the side effects.
    • Tommy  •  Columbia, United States  •  6 mths ago
      Trust me, you dont want a problem in your colon. I have Chrons and have gone through some of the most excruciating pain in my life, and its constant. And any problem in your colon can never be fully 'treated' as of yet. You'll be living off a hormone to reduce inflammation.
    • Paul S  •  New Paltz, United States  •  6 mths ago
      Odd they couldn't mention the name of Coumadin, which requires a lot of testing to get the dose right, but has worked fine for many people. Maybe they didn't want to mention that the old drug was just as effective as the new. And while requiring finer calibration to get the dosage correct, costs about $30.00 a year. They referred to it as "the older drug". Ain't we smart enough to pronounce a big word?
    • rick  •  San Antonio, United States  •  6 mths ago
      Well it depends on promoting money benefits and to whom, #1 distributor of drugs; VAMC and all research hospitals with federal funding, wealth before health, oh my.
    • richard  •  Boston, United States  •  6 mths ago
      Ummm, I'll take the miniscule increased risk vs. bleedin' in my head anyday.
      Thanks, anyways.
    • loprophile  •  Makati City, Philippines  •  6 mths ago
      What's wrong with coumadin (blood thinner) which I have been taking for years. I go for blood test every two months and adjust my dosage depending on how thin or thick my blood is. I think I will not take a risk with a new drug which is still unproven. All these studies are sponsored by drug companies who has a stake to recover their investments in research and manufacturing. I suffer from atrial fibrillation since I was a teenager and only took coumadin on my 70th year. Indeed I am blessed to be still alive today.
    • Iron Monkey  •  Sumter, United States  •  6 mths ago
      After they see how much the drug costs they'll end having another heart attack.
    • Alan's Place  •  Pittsburgh, United States  •  6 mths ago
      Great but what does it cost? My medication costs over $1,000 a month of which I pay about $400. What a bargain !
    • killer  •  6 mths ago
      This new drug might improve your odds by 2%!!! The timing of these drug company "discoveries" amazes me when I consider when various patents run out and generics begin to compete. Some prescription drugs are suddenly allowed to be sold without prescriptions. It's an amazingly corrupt business.
    • Kryptik  •  Ranson, United States  •  6 mths ago
      If we could just find a way to eliminate the top ten causes of death in this country...numbers 11 through 20 would get a lot more funding for research.
    • j  •  6 mths ago
      They forgot to mention that it also is a bank account thinner.
    • Tim  •  North Chicago, United States  •  6 mths ago
      I had a Heart attack in 2007. In 2009, the doctors had me on seven different medications. In 2010, I dumped all nine of them in the toilet and don't take anything now. I feel much better. There is a trade-off on every drug you take (for anything). Having tasted the goods, I will take my chances with nothing.
    • whalewars  •  6 mths ago
      of course moderate exercise does it too... but it's not a drug.
    • Jim  •  6 mths ago
      As with ,many Drs MORTALIT|Y does NOT trumph everything. QUALITY OF LIFE TRUMPHS EVERYTHING. Ask any of the brain damaged ventilator dependant, tube feeding, colostomy pooping, urostomy peeing, warehoused people staring at ceilings waiting for the bed sore on their backside to finally, mercifully kill them.
    • Gene  •  6 mths ago
      Curious about it being extremely expensive, like plavix at $8 a pill
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