Koziel M, Mazurek M, Teutsch C, Diener HC, Dubner SJ, Halperin JL, Ma CS, Rothman KJ, Brandes A, Paquette M, Zint K, Franca LR, Lu S, Bartels DB, Huisman MV, Lip GYH. Persistence with anticoagulation for atrial fibrillation: report from the GLORIA-AF Phase III 1-year follow-up. J Clin Med. 2020 Jun 23;9(6):1969. doi: 10.3390/jcm9061969


BACKGROUND: We aimed to assess the extent to which drug persistence is better with non-vitamin K antagonist oral anticoagulants (NOACs) than vitamin K antagonists (VKAs) in atrial fibrillation (AF) patients and to estimate the difference in therapy persistence depending on NOAC dosing regimen (once daily (QD) vs. twice daily (BID)).

METHODS: Consecutive patients were followed for 1 year in phase III of the GLORIA-AF registry. Drug persistence was defined as the use of OAC without any discontinuation in >30 days or switching to alternative therapy.

RESULTS: Among 21,109 eligible patients in phase III, 17,266 patients who were prescribed OAC at baseline and those who took ≥1 OAC dose were included. The 1-year proportion of patients receiving NOAC and VKA who persisted on treatment was 80% and 75%, respectively. The 1-year persistence with NOACs BID and NOACs QD was 81% and 80%, respectively. Female gender, hypertension, older age, alcohol use, permanent, asymptomatic, and minimally symptomatic AF were associated with better OAC persistence. Region, medication usage predisposing to bleeding, being a current smoker, treatment reimbursement, and proton pump inhibitors were associated with lower OAC persistence.

CONCLUSIONS: Drug persistence was higher with NOACs (1-year persistence was 80%) than with VKAs (75%). There was little difference in 1-year persistence between NOAC dosing regimens.

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