Bleeding is a risk with all antiplatelet drugs, whose effects pose a problem when patients need surgery or suffer a traumatic injury. A fast-acting reversal agent would make the drug safer to use.
Antiplatelet effects of ticareglor were reversed in more than 90% of patients who received a reversal agent, bentracimab, during a phase 3 trial, with early results shared Monday during the 2021 American Heart Association (AHA) Scientific Sessions.
Deepak L. Bhatt, MD, MPH, executive director of interventional cardiovascular programs at Brigham and Women’s Hospital Heart & Vascular Center and professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School, presented the interim results of REVERSE-IT, which PhaseBio will use to submit a Biologics License Application (BLA) to FDA.
Ticagrelor, an oral P2Y12 inhibitor sold as Brilinta by AstraZeneca, has FDA approval to treat patients with acute coronary syndromes, prior myocardial infarction, high-risk coronary artery disease, transient ischemic attack, and stroke. It currently competes with generic drugs clopidogrel and prasugrel, which do not have reversal agents.
Bleeding is a risk with all antiplatelet drugs, whose effects pose a problem when patients need surgery or suffer a traumatic injury. A fast-acting reversal agent would make the drug safer to use, Bhatt said in an interview.
“I do think having a reversal agent available will make doctors more comfortable using ticagrelor preferentially to using prasugrel or clopidogrel,” he said. “It’s even a differentiating feature vs aspirin, which is also an irreversible agent. If there's a patient who you're worried about bleeding, maybe they're at high bleeding risk, the possibility of a reversal agent [being approved] might make it more appealing to use ticagrelor, even in the patient who's not necessarily a priori at high bleeding risk.”
In his presentation, Bhatt explained the mechanism behind ticagrelor, which “reversibly binds to the P2Y12 receptor” on platelets. This binding prevents ADP from signaling through to the P2Y12 receptor, blocking platelets from activating their clotting effect.
Bentracimab, meanwhile, binds to ticagrelor “with high affinity and specificity,” Bhatt said, blocking ticagrelor’s antiplatelet effects until the drug passes from the patient’s system. Bentracimab is given as a bolus followed by an infusion, and the agent acts quickly—significant effects were seen after just 5 minutes, based on results from assays.
“Rates of effective hemostasis were adjudicated as good or excellent in >90% of cases, with no drug-related serious adverse events or allergic or infusion-related reactions,” the results stated. The reversal agent’s effects were consistent across all subgroups, although the number of patients using the drug for bleeding was small compared with those who used it before surgery.
Investigators concluded that bentracimab “provided immediate and sustained reversal of ticagrelor’s antiplatelet effects.”
In his presentation, Bhatt said that bentracimab’s safety had been demonstrated in phase 1 and 2 studies that had control arms. For the phase 3 REVERSE-IT trial, investigators did not have a control arm, a point that a discussant raised. However, Bhatt said both the FDA and the European Medicines Agency recognize that many investigators would not want to randomize very sick patients.
“The reality is, when an investigator is faced with the possibility of having study drug in hand, and somebody with an intracranial hemorrhage in front of them, and then they're stuck having to randomize, that's a situation that many investigators maybe not all are uncomfortable with,” Bhatt said.
Instead, the REVERSE-IT team is following protocols similar to those used to study novel oral anticoagulants, he said. The open-label design calls for at least 200 patients to be enrolled; thus far, 150 have been treated with bentracimab, including 142 facing urgent surgery and 8 seen for bleeding. In the surgical arm, investigators reported hemostatis was achieved in 135 patients; it was achieved in 7 patients treated for bleeding.
Full results from the study will be published online in January in NEJM Evidence, Bhatt said.
Reference
Bhatt DL, Pollack CV, Mazer CD, et al; REVERSE-IT Investigators. Effect of bentracimab on platelet Inhibition and hemostasis in patients on ticagrelor with major bleeding or requiring urgent procedures. Presented at: 2021 American Heart Association Scientific Sessions; November 15, 2021. Late-breaking session 7.
The Importance of Examining and Preventing Atrial Fibrillation
August 29th 2023At this year’s American Society for Preventive Cardiology Congress on CVD Prevention, Emelia J. Benjamin, MD, ScM, delivered the Honorary Fellow Award Lecture, “The Imperative to Focus on the Prevention of Atrial Fibrillation,” as the recipient of this year’s Honorary Fellow of the American Society for Preventive Cardiology award.
Listen
Promoting Equity in Public Health: Policy, Investment, and Community Engagement Solutions
June 28th 2022On this episode of Managed Care Cast, we speak with Georges C. Benjamin, MD, executive director of the American Public Health Association, on the core takeaways of his keynote session at AHIP 2022 on public health policy and other solutions to promote equitable health and well-being.
Listen
Community Investment, Engagement Are Essential to Fully Address Cardiovascular Health Disparities
November 19th 2024Community-based researchers can teach clinicians a lot about how to best approach underserved populations disproportionately impacted by cardiovascular health complications.
Read More