View clinical trials related to Rivaroxaban.
Filter by:Individual differences in drug efficacy and adverse reactions are common in the clinical application of drugs. Individual differences are caused by many factors, among which genetic factors account for more than 20%. Novel oral anticoagulant drugs (NOACs, including rivaroxaban, apixaban, edoxaban, dabigatran, etc.) and novel antiplatelet drug ticagrelor have the advantages of convenient use and no need for monitoring. But novel oral antithrombotic drugs also increase the risk of bleeding, and there is currently a lack of effective antagonists when antithrombosis is excessive or emergency surgery is required. At present, there are few studies on the causes of individual differences in novel antithrombotic drugs, and there is a lack of predictable biomarkers or drug genotypes, especially in China. Therefore, on the basis of previous studies on NOACs and ticagrelor individualized medication cohorts, this study plans to establish a validation cohort for novel antithrombotic drugs bleeding related biomarkers, conduct multi-omics testing and long-term follow-up, and explore markers related to pharmacodynamics of antithrombotic drugs, adverse bleeding reactions and clinical outcomes.
The Valeria trial will provide high-quality evidence regarding the efficacy and safety of oral rivaroxaban in thromboprophylaxis after gynecological pelvic cancer surgery in comparison with standard parenteral enoxaparin.
The aim of this study is to assess the efficacy and safety of rivaroxaban or aspirin combined with clopidogrel in patients with coronary heart disease and gastrointestinal diseases undergoing PCI.
Rivaroxaban has been developed in the various clinical settings.Although cancer-associated DVT or PE was included in previously programs, limited patients of the total populations were cancer patients with totally implantable access ports in these studies. In this sense, investigators feel that new oral anticoagulants should be re-investigated in this highly specific patients group.Therefore, investigators are planning to conduct a prospective study to estimate the efficacy and safety of rivaroxaban for thromboprophylaxis in high-risk cancer patients with totally implantable access ports.
Study Type and Design Prospective, Observational Study Rivaroxaban in Elderly AF patients with or without renal impairment in Korea This study will investigate effectiveness and safety in elderly patients, the result from well-designed and high-quality prospective clinical registry collected through real-world clinical practice is expected to resolve current medical unmet needs of rivaroxaban in Korean elderly patients. Primary Study Objective(s) To investigate the effectiveness of rivaroxaban in elderly patients with NVAF, with or without renal impairment in Korea real-world clinical practice settings Secondary Study Objective(s) To see safety outcome including major bleeding, clinically non-major bleeding, all-cause mortality rivaroxaban in subgroup based on risk factor(eg. Renal impairment) physicians' treatment pattern in rivaroxaban
The purpose of this clinical randomized trial is to evaluate the efficacy and safety of rivaroxaban compared with warfarin in dissolving the LAA thrombus in patients with atrial fibrillation.
It is general that there are many factors for individual differences of drugs in clinical application, of which genetic factors accounted for more than 20%. Novel oral anticoagulants-NOACs (include rivaroxaban, apixaban, dabigatran and so on) have advantages of convenient use and no need of monitoring, compared with the traditional vitamin K antagonist. With lack of predicted biomarkers, especially the research data of Chinese, it has the important significance in studying individual differences of NOACs in the anticoagulant efficacy and safety, through the pharmacogenomics research. The aim of this study is to determine the polymorphism of drug metabolizing enzymes, drug transporters and drug target genes in Chinese population. By detecting the gene polymorphism, we intend to study the pharmacokinetic/ pharmacodynamics/ pharmacogenomics (PK-PD-PG) correlation of NOACs and provide scientific basis for accurate medication guide for people to use NOACs.
Rivaroxaban has been developed in the various clinical settings, prevention of venous thromboembolism (VTE)after major orthopedic surgery, prevention of stroke in atrial fibrillation, and in the treatment of acute coronary syndromes. And, in the EINSTEIN-pulmonary embolism (PE) and EINSTEIN-deep venous thrombosis (DVT) programs, rivaroxaban showed non-inferior to standard therapy for the treatment of PE and DVT. However, there has been limited experience of rivaroxaban with secondary VTE prophylaxis in cancer patients. Although cancer-associated DVT or PE was included in previously mentioned EINSTEIN programs, only approximately 5% of the total populations were cancer patients in these studies. Thus, investigators could not automatically translate the results of these studies into the real practice management of cancer-associated VTE patients. Moreover, until now, new oral anticoagulants, including dabigatran and rivaroxaban, have been compared to long-term warfarin therapy, which were well-known inferior agent, but not low molecular weight heparin. In this sense, investigators feel that new oral anticoagulants, particularly rivaroxaban, should be re-investigated in this highly specific patients group. Therefore, investigators are planning to conduct a prospective study evaluating the efficacy and safety of rivaroxaban in Korean patients with cancer-associated VTE.