• Thromb Haemostasis · Feb 2003

    Randomized Controlled Trial Multicenter Study Comparative Study Clinical Trial

    Direct thrombin inhibitor melagatran followed by oral ximelagatran in comparison with enoxaparin for prevention of venous thromboembolism after total hip or knee replacement.

    • Bengt I Eriksson, Giancarlo Agnelli, Alexander T Cohen, Ola E Dahl, Patrick Mouret, Nadia Rosencher, Christina Eskilson, Ingela Nylander, Lars Frison, Mats Ogren, and METHRO III Study Group.
    • Orthopaedics Department, Sahlgrenska University Hospital/OSTRA, Göteborg, Sweden. b.eriksson@orthop.gu.se
    • Thromb Haemostasis. 2003 Feb 1;89(2):288-96.

    AbstractWe evaluated whether a postoperative regimen with melagatran followed by oral ximelagatran, two new direct thrombin inhibitors, was an optimal regimen for thromboprophylaxis in major orthopaedic surgery. In a double-blind study, 2788 patients undergoing total hip or knee replacement were randomly assigned to receive for 8 to 11 days either 3 mg of subcutaneous melagatran started 4-12 h postoperatively, followed by 24 mg of oral ximelagatran twice-daily or 40 mg of subcutaneous enoxaparin once-daily, started 12 h preoperatively. Ximelagatran was to be initiated within the first two postoperative days. The primary efficacy endpoint was venous thromboembolism (deep-vein thrombosis detected by mandatory venography, pulmonary embolism or unexplained death). The main safety endpoint was bleeding. Venous thromboembolism occurred in 355/1146 (31.0%) and 306/1122 (27.3%) patients in the ximelagatran and enoxaparin group, respectively, a difference in risk of 3.7% in favour of enoxaparin (p = 0.053). Bleeding was comparable between the two groups.

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