Published Findings Highlight Tecarfarin's Potential and Reinforce Need for Better Anticoagulation Therapy in LVAD Patients

In This Article:

  • Analysis features the growing need to evolve anticoagulation therapy beyond warfarin to avoid gastrointestinal bleeding, a significant and common complication for left ventricular assist device (LVAD) patients resulting in expensive hospitalizations

  • Tecarfarin, a novel vitamin K antagonist (VKA), uses a different metabolic pathway than warfarin, the most commonly used anticoagulant for LVAD patients, and may offer more stable and effective anticoagulation

PONTE VEDRA, Fla., Aug. 20, 2024 /PRNewswire/ -- Cadrenal Therapeutics, Inc., (Nasdaq: CVKD), a biopharmaceutical company developing tecarfarin, a late-stage, next-generation VKA oral and reversible anticoagulant (blood thinner) designed to prevent heart attacks, strokes, and deaths due to blood clots in patients with implanted cardiac devices or rare cardiovascular conditions, today highlighted a manuscript that was recently peer-reviewed and published in the Journal of Cardiac Failure evaluating the relationship between time in therapeutic range, or TTR, management quality and LVAD patient clinical outcomes. These findings focus on the potential role of investigating new VKA agents beyond warfarin in improving clinical outcomes in LVAD patients.

Cadrenal Therapeutics, Inc. is a biopharmaceutical company focused on developing tecarfarin, a clinical-stage novel cardiorenal therapy with orphan drug designation. (PRNewsfoto/Cadrenal Therapeutics, Inc.)
Cadrenal Therapeutics, Inc. is a biopharmaceutical company focused on developing tecarfarin, a clinical-stage novel cardiorenal therapy with orphan drug designation. (PRNewsfoto/Cadrenal Therapeutics, Inc.)

In the manuscript co-authored by Mandeep R. Mehra, MD, MSc, FRCP, Brigham and Women's Hospital Heart and Vascular Center, Center for Advanced Heart Disease, titled "Antithrombotic Strategies with Left Ventricular Devices," the findings conclude that although the current generation of LVAD pumps has largely overcome hemocompatibility-related adverse events there is a continuing need to evolve the anticoagulant therapy to avoid persistent gastrointestinal bleeding, which leads to frequent hospital admissions, procedures, blood transfusions, decreased quality of life and increased cost of care.1

Dr. Mandeep Mehra, who chaired the ARIES-HM3 study, commented, "Tecarfarin could potentially be an important therapy for patients with LVADs who all require chronic anticoagulation since it does not get affected by drug-drug interactions or changes in kidney function like warfarin and deserves further study."

A secondary analysis of the ARIES-HM3 trial, sponsored by Abbott, evaluated the relationship between VKA management quality and clinical outcomes, wherein a median TTR for VKAs of 56% was achieved. This analysis found an inverse relationship between TTR and bleeding events, with a 47% reduction in bleeding risk for patients with a TTR above the median. Lower TTRs were associated with threefold more sub-therapeutic INRs than supra-therapeutic INRs, with no clear correlation between higher INRs and bleeding events.