Abstract
Direct oral anticoagulants (DOACs) apixaban and rivaroxaban are broadly used in the management of venous thromboembolism (VTE). Although not routinely required, measurement of their plasma concentration is advised for an increasing number of indications. Due to the lack of therapeutic ranges, current guidelines recommend reporting DOAC plasma levels together with expected levels from previous pivotal studies. The aim of this study was to assess DOAC level variation in a large VTE patient population. Drug concentrations determined by measurement of the anti-Xa-activity using drug-specific calibrators in citrated plasma samples from patients on rivaroxaban (n = 1471) or apixaban (n = 725) were analyzed. Observed 5th–95th percentile ranges of apixaban peak/trough levels (63–299/13–114 ng/mL for 5 mg, 37–161/7–68 ng/mL for 2.5 mg twice daily) were similar to previously reported mass-spectrometry-based reference data, and 10th–90th percentile ranges of rivaroxaban peak/trough levels (98–367/8–55 ng/mL for 20 mg, 51–211/5–27 ng/mL for 10 mg once daily) were even narrower. Age and drug levels correlated weakly (r ≤ 0.330). Drug levels measured repeatedly in subgroups of patients showed a strong correlation (r ≥ 0.773). In conclusion, anti-Xa-activity-based measurement of apixaban and rivaroxaban yields reliable results. However, the paucity of levels off-range underlines the need for evidence-based thresholds to better assist clinical decision making.
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