Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2021
Characterizing safety and efficacy in ovarian cancer patients with thromboembolism treated with rivaroxaban.
Abstract
e18720 Background: There is a paucity of real-world data regarding rates of recurrent venous thromboembolism (VTE), major bleeding and all-cause mortality among ovarian cancer patients with thrombosis treated with direct oral anticoagulants (DOACs) currently available. We sought to evaluate the effectiveness and safety of rivaroxaban versus low molecular-weight heparin (LMWH) for cancer-associated thrombosis (CAT) treatment in patients with ovarian cancer. Methods: We utilized US Surveillance, Epidemiology and End Results-Medicare–linked data from 2013-2016 to identify adults with active ovarian cancer, undergoing hospitalization/emergency department admission for CAT and prescribed rivaroxaban or LMWH for outpatient anticoagulation. Rivaroxaban and LMWH cohorts were balanced using propensity score overlap weighting . Outcomes included the composite of recurrent thrombosis or major bleeding, each outcome separately and mortality at six-months using an intention-to-treat approach. On-treatment analysis after 12-months was also performed. Hazard ratios (HRs) with 95% confidence intervals using overlap weighted cox regression were reported. Results: We included 33 rivaroxaban and 92 LMWH-managed CAT patients. In each cohort, mean age was 73, 79.5% of patients were white, 46.9% had a history of ≥ stage 3 chronic kidney disease (CKD), two-thirds had metastatic disease at the time of VTE, and 32.6% had a prior VTE. Patients were diagnosed with ovarian cancer an average of 1.40 years prior to the index VTE event and 45.8% had a pulmonary embolism (with or without DVT) as the index event. Our analysis did not detect a significant difference in outcomes with rivaroxaban versus LMWH at six-months (Table). On-treatment analysis at 12-months showed similar results. Conclusions: Rivaroxaban may be a reasonable alternative to LMWH for CAT patients with ovarian cancer. Large observational studies are needed to confirm these results.[Table: see text]