| Literature DB >> 25135294 |
Amy Sarma1, Jeffrey E Rossi, Jean M Connors, Robert P Giugliano.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Novel oral anticoagulants are increasingly used for stroke prophylaxis in patients with non-valvular atrial fibrillation. While these agents offer a more predictable pharmacokinetic profile, the lack of readily available laboratory tests to monitor the level of anticoagulation and absence of an antidote or established therapies to reverse the anticoagulant effect make management of cases of over-anticoagulation challenging. CASE REPORT: In this case report an 87-year-old man with a history of atrial fibrillation presented with dabigatran excess in the setting of life-threatening, acute renal and hepatic failure. The authors review the use of dabigatran in elderly patients, the available data on management of patients with excess anticoagulation, and the potential options for reversal of the anticoagulation effect.Entities:
Year: 2013 PMID: 25135294 PMCID: PMC4107435 DOI: 10.1007/s40119-013-0016-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cardiol Ther ISSN: 2193-6544
Fig. 1Admission electrocardiogram revealed atrial fibrillation with a ventricular response rate of ~36 beats/min. The QRS morphology, duration, axis, voltage, and R wave progression across the precordium are consistent with nonspecific interventricular conduction delay and right axis deviation
Fig. 2Posteroanterior (a) and lateral (b) admission chest radiograph. Admission chest radiograph revealed a small right pleural effusion with right basilar opacity consistent with pneumonia
Selected initial laboratory results
| Test | Result | Reference range |
|---|---|---|
| Sodium (mmol/L) | 137 | 135–145 |
| Potassium (mmol/L) | 6.6 | 3.4–5.0 |
| Chloride (mmol/L) | 100 | 98–107 |
| Total CO2 (mmol/L) | 10 | 22–31 |
| Blood urea nitrogen (mg/dL) | 45 | 6–23 |
| Creatinine (mg/dL) | 3.05 | 0.50–1.20 |
| Glucose (mg/dL) | 102 | 70–100 |
| Magnesium (mg/dL) | 2.6 | 1.7–2.6 |
| ALT (U/L) | 546 | 10–50 |
| AST (U/L) | 422 | 10–50 |
| Alkaline phosphatase (U/L) | 111 | 35–130 |
| Total bilirubin (mg/dL) | 1.4 | 0.0–1.0 |
| Direct bilirubin (mg/dL) | 0.5 | 0.0–0.3 |
| CK (U/L) | 170 | 39–308 |
| CKMB (ng/mL) | 5.9 | 0.0–6.6 |
| Troponin T (ng/mL) | 0.08 | 0.00–0.00 |
| NT-proBNP (pg/mL) | 3,695 | 0–1,799 |
| White blood cell count (K/μL) | 18.52 | 4–10 |
| Hemoglobin (g/dL) | 14.0 | 13.5–18.0 |
| Hematocrit (%) | 43.5 | 40–54 |
| Platelet count (K/μL) | 214 | 150–450 |
| PT (s) |
|
|
| PTT (s) |
|
|
| INR |
|
|
| Fibrinogen (mg/dL) | 279 | 200–450 |
| Diluted TT (s) |
|
|
ALT alanine aminotransferase, AST aspartate aminotransferase, CK creatine kinase, CKMB creatine kinase myocardial band, INR international normalized ratio, NT-proBNP N-terminal prohormone of brain natriuretic peptide, PT prothrombin time, PTT partial thromboplastin time, TT thrombin time
Fig. 3Coagulation parameters, creatinine and liver enzymes over time. 2 units (total 400 cc) of FFP and 5 mg of oral vitamin K were administered at arrow 1; 5,020 international units of Profilnine®, 2 units of FFP and 10 mg of intravenous vitamin K were administered at arrow 2; 2 units of FFP were administered at arrow 3 (prior to central venous catheter placement). Thrombin time was measured (not shown) at hours 7, 24, and 26 and remained >150 s and the diluted TT was 125.0 and 113.1 s at 24 and 26 h, respectively. Of note, 8 months prior to admission the PT and international normalized ratio were 25.2 and 1.1, respectively. PTT partial thromboplastin time, ALT alanine aminotransferase, AST aspartate aminotransferase, Cre creatinine, FFP fresh frozen plasma, PT prothrombin time, TT thrombin clotting time
Summary of case reports of dabigatran over-anticoagulation treated with HD
| Authors | Patient | Treatment |
|---|---|---|
| Wychowski et al. [ | 66-year-old woman (CrCl ~15 mL/min) with upper GI bleeding | Four sessions of HD over 5 days resulted in resolution of bleeding, decrease in INR from 2.2 to 1.3, decrease in aPTT from 74.7 to 34.8, no change in corrected TT from >60 s |
| Maddry et al. [ | 74-year-old man (Cr 3.1 mg/dL) with hematemesis | After 4 h of HD, the dabigatran level decreased from 370 to 130 ng/mL |
| Louet et al. [ | 86-year-old man (CrCl 13.8 mL/min) with GI bleeding | 6 h of HD resulted in 60% drug removal |
| Warkentin et al. [ | 79-year-old man (CrCl 36 mL/min) underwent cardiac surgery with therapeutic dabigatran levels and suffered severe post-op bleeding | After 6 h of high-flux dialysis, the dabigatran level decreased from 76 to 27 ng/mL |
| Harinstein et al. [ | 84-year-old man (CrCl 25 mL/min) with GI and surgical site bleeding | After 51 h of continuous renal replacement therapy (HD could not be performed due to hemodynamic instability) TT dropped from >120 to 109.7 s |
| Wanek et al. [ | 59-year-old woman (CrCl 40 mL/min) presented for cardiac transplant 36 h after last dabigatran dose | After 1 h of HD, TT decreased from 90.6 to 65.6 s; after 2.5 h, TT decreased to 60.2 s |
| Chang et al. [ | 94-year-old man with normal renal function presented with a subdural hematoma | After 1 h of HD, the dabigatran level was 49 ng/mL; after 2 h, the dabigatran level was 20 ng/mL. Dabigatran levels rebounded after dialysis cessation, causing the authors to suggest a longer duration of therapy for future cases |
aPTT activated partial thromboplastin time, ARF acute renal failure, CrCl creatinine clearance, GI gastrointestinal, HD hemodialysis, INR international normalized ratio, TT thrombin clotting time