Authors
Tae Oh Kim, Sangwon Han, Jeongryul Ryu, Jung Bok Lee, Chong Hyun Suh, Seong-Bong Wee, Soo Jin Kang, Dae Hyuk Moon, Cheol Whan Lee, Jun Gyo Gwon, Seung-Whan Lee
Published in
European heart journal. Cardiovascular Imaging. Jul 13, 2026. Epub Jul 13, 2026.
Abstract
Aspirin plus low-dose rivaroxaban reduces cardiovascular events in stable atherosclerosis; its effect on arterial inflammation in humans remains unclear. We tested whether adding low-dose rivaroxaban to aspirin reduces 18F-fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography/computed tomography (FDG PET/CT)-detectable carotid plaque inflammation.
In this single-centre, randomised, open-label, proof-of-concept trial with blinded endpoint assessment, adults with asymptomatic carotid stenosis (20%-80%) and elevated carotid FDG uptake (target-to-background ratio [TBR] ≥ 1.6) were assigned 1:1 to aspirin (100 mg/day) plus rivaroxaban (2.5 mg twice daily) or aspirin alone. The primary endpoint was percent change in the most diseased segment (MDS) TBR of the index carotid artery at 12 months. Secondary endpoints included whole-vessel carotid TBR, aortic TBR, lipid and high-sensitivity C-reactive protein (hsCRP) changes. From September 2021 to December 2023, 92 patients were randomised (mean age 69.4 years; 88% men), and 81 (88%) completed paired imaging. Mean percent changes in MDS TBR were -7.25% (95% confidence interval [CI], -11.03 to -3.48) with combination therapy and -7.36% (95% CI, -11.06 to -3.67) with aspirin alone (adjusted between-group difference, -1.50 percentage points, 95% CI, -6.20 to 3.21; P = 0.529). Secondary imaging endpoints were concordant. Laboratory parameters were similar, except for a nominal hsCRP difference without multiplicity adjustment. Minor bleeding occurred in four (8.7%) and one (2.2%) patients, respectively; no major bleeding or deaths occurred.
In patients with carotid atherosclerosis, adding low-dose rivaroxaban to aspirin did not produce a detectable incremental reduction in 18F-FDG PET/CT-assessed carotid plaque inflammation compared with aspirin alone over 12 months.
PMID:
42439277
Bibliographic data and abstract were imported from PubMed on 13 Jul 2026.
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