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A randomized, partially blinded, multicenter, active-controlled, dose-ranging study assessing the safety, efficacy, and pharmacodynamics of the REG1 anticoagulation system in patients with acute coronary syndromes: design and rationale of the RADAR Phase IIb trial
Authors:Povsic Thomas J  Cohen Mauricio G  Mehran Roxana  Buller Christopher E  Bode Christoph  Cornel Jan H  Kasprzak Jarosław D  Montalescot Gilles  Joseph Diane  Wargin William A  Rusconi Christopher P  Zelenkofske Steven L  Becker Richard C  Alexander John H
Affiliation:aDuke Clinical Research Institute, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, NC;bMiller School of Medicine, University of Miami, Miami, FL;cMount Sinai Medical Center, New York, NY;dHamilton General Hospital, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada;eUniversity of Freiberg, Freiberg, Germany;fMedisch Centrum Alkmaar, Alkmaar, Netherlands;gMedical University of Lodz, ?ód?, Poland;hInstitut de Cardiologie, Pitié-Salpétrière Hospital, Paris, France;iPK-PM Associates, LLC, Chapel Hill, NC;jRegado Biosciences, Durham, NC;kRegado Biosciences, Basking Ridge, NJ
Abstract:Anticoagulants are the cornerstone of current acute coronary syndrome (ACS) therapy; however, anticoagulation regimens that aggressively reduce ischemic events are almost uniformly associated with more bleeding. REG1, an anticoagulation system, consists of RB006 (pegnivacogin), an RNA oligonucleotide factor IXa inhibitor, and RB007 (anivamersen), its complementary controlling agent. Phase I and IIa studies defined predictable relationships between doses of RB006, RB007, and degree of antifactor IX activity. The efficacy and safety of REG1 for the treatment of patients with ACS managed invasively and the safety of reversing RB006 with RB007 after cardiac catheterization are unknown. Randomized, partially-blinded, multicenter, active-controlled, dose-ranging study assessing the safety, efficacy, and pharmacodynamics of the REG1 anticoagulation system compared to unfractionated heparin or low molecular heparin in subjects with acute coronary syndrome (RADAR) is designed to assess both the efficacy of the anticoagulant RB006 and the safety of a range of levels of RB006 reversal with RB007. The objectives of RADAR are (1) to determine the safety of a range of levels of RB006 reversal with RB007 after catheterization, (2) to confirm whether a dose of 1 mg/kg RB006 results in near-complete inhibition of factor IXa in patients with ACS, and (3) to assess the efficacy of RB006 as an anticoagulant in patients with ACS undergoing percutaneous coronary intervention.
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