| Literature DB >> 26336492 |
Tomasz Ciurus1, Sebastian Sobczak1, Anna Cichocka-Radwan1, Malgorzata Lelonek1.
Abstract
Oral direct inhibitors of thrombin and activated factor Xa are approved as new anticoagulant drugs. In contrast to vitamin K antagonists (VKA) and heparins, the new agents have single targets in the coagulation cascade and more predictable pharmacokinetics, but they lack validated and available antidotes. Unlike VKA, they do not require routine monitoring of coagulation. However, the measurement of their pharmacologic effects might be of value in selected patients. They interfere with the routine coagulation tests, which should be interpreted with caution. Specific tests exist and can be used in case of emergencies. Adequate supportive care and temporary removal of all antithrombotic agents constitute the basis for management of serious bleeding complications. The administration of coagulation factors, such as fresh frozen plasma, prothrombin complex concentrates or recombinant activated FVII, can benefit in life-threatening bleeding or emergency surgery. Specific antidotes for non-vitamin K oral anticoagulants are in clinical development. This review aims at answering in a brief and simplified manner some clinical questions.Entities:
Keywords: anticoagulation; apixaban; dabigatran; rivaroxaban
Year: 2015 PMID: 26336492 PMCID: PMC4550032 DOI: 10.5114/kitp.2015.52851
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Kardiochir Torakochirurgia Pol ISSN: 1731-5530
Absorption and metabolism of the different non-vitamin K oral anticoagulants (NOAC) [7]
| Dabigatran | Apixaban | Rivaroxaban | Edoxaban | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 3-7% | 50% | 66% without food Almost 100% with food | 62% | |
| YES | NO | NO | NO | |
| 35% | 87% | > 90% | 55% | |
| 20%/80% | 73%/27% | 65%/35% | 50%/50% | |
| NO | YES | YES | Minimal (< 4% of elimination) | |
| NO EFFECT | NO EFFECT | Increase of 39% more | 6–22% more | |
| NO | NO | Mandatory | NO | |
| Dyspepsia | No problem | No problem | No problem | |
| 12-17 h | 12 h | 5-9 h (young) 11-13 h (elderly) | 9-11 h |
Interpretation of coagulation assays in patients treated with different non-vitamin K oral anticoagulants (NOAC) [7]
| Dabigatran | Apixaban | Rivaroxaban | Edoxaban | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2 h after ingestion | 1-4 h after ingestion | 2-4 h after ingestion | 1-2 h after ingestion | |
| 12-24 h after ingestion | 12-24 h after ingestion | 16-24 h after ingestion | 12-24 h after ingestion | |
| Cannot be used | Cannot be used | Prolonged: may indicate excess bleeding | Prolonged | |
| Cannot be used | Cannot be used | Cannot be used | Cannot be used | |
| At trough: > 2 × ULN suggests excess bleeding risk | Cannot be used | Cannot be used | Prolonged | |
| At trough: > 200 ng/ml or 65 s excess bleeding risk | Cannot be used | Cannot be used | Cannot be used | |
| At trough: > 3 × ULN excess bleeding risk | Not affected | Not affected | Not affected |
PT – prothrombin time, aPTT – activated partial thromboplastin time, dTT – diluted thrombin time, INR – international normalized ratio, ECT – ecarin clotting time, ULN – upper limit of normal
Validation of the efficacy of ISI-rivaroxaban in results normalization thromboplastins [28]
| PT ratio | INR VKA | INR rivaroxaban | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| A | B | C | A | B | C | A | B | C | |
| 1.27 | 1.76 | 2.67 | 1.34 | 2.01 | 3.39 | 1.33 | 1.96 | 3.23 | |
| 5.5 | 12.1 | 18.1 | 10.4 | 24.6 | 39 | 2.1 | 3.3 | 1.9 | |
| 14.0 | 29.6 | 2.1 | |||||||
A, B and C refer to the test plasmas with 0.1 µg ml−1, 0.3 µg ml−1 and 0.7 µg ml−1 rivaroxaban.
CV – between-thromboplastin coefficient of variation, INR – international normalized ratio; PT – prothrombin time, ISI – international sensitivity index. Mean PT values were obtained with different thromboplastins and different ways of expressing the results. PT ratio, INR VKA and INR rivaroxaban refer to the ratio of the clotting time (test plasma-to-normal plasma), and the INRs valid for vitamin K antagonists and rivaroxaban, respectively.
Fig. 1Bleeding (major, non-major clinically relevant and minor) rates by dosing regimen relative to warfarin bleeding rate in patients with atrial fibrillation [37]
qd – once daily dosing, bid – twice daily dosing
Recommended antithrombotic strategies following coronary artery stenting in patients with atrial fibrillation at moderate-to-high thromboembolic risk [36]
| Hemorrhagic risk | Stroke risk | Clinical setting | Recommendations |
|---|---|---|---|
| Low or moderate (HAS-BLED 0–2) | Moderate (CHA2DS2-VASC = 1 in males) or High (CHA2DS2-VASC ≥ 2) | Stable CAD |
|
| ACS |
| ||
| High (HAS-BLED ≥ 3) | Moderate (CHA2DS2-VASC = 1 in males) | Stable CAD |
|
| ACS |
| ||
| High (CHA2DS2-VASC ≥ 2) | Stable CAD |
| |
| ACS |
|
ACS – acute coronary syndrome, CAD – coronary artery disease, OAC – oral anticoagulation, either warfarin (INR: 2.0–2.5) or non-VKA oral anticoagulant at the lower tested dose in AF (dabigatran 110 mg b.i.d., rivaroxaban 15 mg o.d. or apixaban 2.5 mg b.i.d.).
Last intake of drug before elective surgical intervention [7]
| Creatinine clearance (ml/min) | Dabigatran | Apixaban | Rivaroxaban | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Low risk | High risk | Low risk | High risk | Low risk | High risk | |
| CrCl > 80 ml/min | ≥ 24 | ≥ 48 | ≥ 24 | ≥ 48 | ≥ 24 | ≥ 48 |
| CrCl 50-80 ml/min | ≥ 36 | ≥ 72 | ≥ 24 | ≥ 48 | ≥ 24 | ≥ 48 |
| CrCl 30-50 ml/min | ≥ 48 | ≥ 96 | ≥ 24 | ≥ 48 | ≥ 24 | ≥ 48 |
| CrCl 15-30 ml/min | Not indicated | Not indicated | ≥ 36 | ≥ 48 | ≥ 36 | ≥ 48 |
| CrCl < 15 ml/min | No official indication for use | |||||
Low risk – surgery with low risk of bleeding, high risk – surgery with high risk of bleeding
Fig. 2Algorithm for management with non-vitamin K oral anticoagulants around the time of surgery, for patients on rivaroxaban and apixaban with a creatinine clearance (CrCl) of more than 30 ml/min [7]