| Literature DB >> 26822674 |
Fulvia Costantinides1, Roberto Rizzo2, Lorenzo Pascazio3, Michele Maglione2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The aim of this paper is to contribute to the discussion on how to approach patients taking new orally administered anticoagulants (NOAs) dabigatran etexilate (a direct thrombin inhibitor), rivaroxaban and apixaban (factor Xa inhibitors), before, during and after dental treatment in light of the more recent knowledges. DISCUSSION: In dentistry and oral surgery, the major concerns in treatment of patients taking direct thrombin inhibitors and factor Xa inhibitors is the risk of haemorrhage and the absence of a specific reversal agent. The degree of renal function, the complexity of the surgical procedure and the patient's risk of bleeding due to other concomitant causes, are the most important factors to consider during surgical dental treatment of patients taking NOAs. For patients requiring simple dental extraction or minor oral surgery procedures, interruption of NOA is not generally necessary, while an higher control of bleeding and discontinuation of the drug (at least 24 h) should be requested before invasive surgical procedures, depending on renal functionality. The clinician has to consider that the number of patients taking NOAs is rapidly increasing. Since available data are not sufficient to establish an evidence-based dental management, the dentist must use caution and attention when treating patients taking dabigatran, rivaroxaban and apixaban.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 26822674 PMCID: PMC4731944 DOI: 10.1186/s12903-016-0170-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Oral Health ISSN: 1472-6831 Impact factor: 2.757
Guide to discontinuation of dabigatran before elective surgery; indications are matched for renal function and risk of bleeding (van Ryn et al. 2010) [9]
| Cretinine clearance (ml/min) | Time of discontinuation before surgery for standard risk of bleeding | Time of discontinuation before surgery for high risk of bleedinga |
|---|---|---|
| >80 | 24 h | 2–4 days |
| >50 to ≤ 80 | 24 h | 2–4 days |
| >30 to ≤ 50 | ≥48 h | 4 days |
| ≤30b | 2–5 days | 5 days |
aDeterminants of bleeding risk are: type of surgery (cardiac, neural, abdominal, surgery involving major organs or requiring complete haemostasis), advanced age, comorbidities (i.e. major cardiac, respiratory, liver diseases) and concomitant use of antiplatelet therapy
bDabigatran controindicated
Principal characteristics of new oral anticoagulants (NOAs)
| NOAs | Class | Indications | Dosage | Time to peak plasma concentration | Half life | Routes of elimination | Monitoring of coagulation |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dabigatran etexilate | Direct thrombin inhibitor | Prevention of cerebrovascular complications in non-valvular atrial fibrillation; hip and knee replacement surgery; venous thromboembolism prophylaxis and management | 110 mg- 150 mg twice daily | 2–4 h | 12–14 h; 14–17 h in elderly; 15–18 h in moderate renal impairment; up to 28 h in advanced renal impairment | 80 % renal, 20 % hepatic | Not needed |
| Rivaroxaban | Direct inhibitor of factor Xa | Prevention of cerebrovascular complications in non-valvular atrial fibrillation; venous thromboembolism prophylaxis and management | 20 mg daily | 2.5–4 h | 5–10 h; 12–13 h in patients > 75 years | 66 % renal, 28 % in feces | Not needed |
| Apixaban | Direct inhibitor of factor Xa | Prevention of cerebrovascular complications in non-valvular atrial fibrillation; venous thromboembolism prophylaxis and management | 5 mg twice daily | 1–3 h | 10–14 h | 25 % renal, 55 % intestinal, remnant hepatic | Not needed |
Summary of the more recent guidelines for dental management of patients taking NOAs
| Author | Type of NOA | Minor surgical procedures (low-medium risk)a | Major surgical procedures and/or co-morbidities (high risk)b |
|---|---|---|---|
| Firriolo FJ and Hupp WS, 2012 [ | Dabigatran | For dental procedure that involve bleeding: do not discontinue the daily dose in patient with normal renal function and without other risk for impaired haemostasis | For oral and maxillofacial surgical procedures with possible complications for excessive bleeding and/or impaired haemostasis: discontinue dabigatran ≥ 24 h before surgery or longer depending on renal impairment and bleeding risk (Table |
| Rivaroxaban | For dental procedure that involve bleeding: do not discontinue the daily dose in patient with normal renal function and without other risk for impaired haemostasis | For oral and maxillofacial surgical procedures with possible complications for excessive bleeding and/or impaired haemostasis: discontinue rivaroxaban ≥ 24 h before surgery or longer depending on renal impairment and bleeding risk (Table | |
| Davis C et al., 2013 [ | Dabigatran | Perform surgery as long as possible after last dose | Discontinue 2–3 half –lives before surgery |
| Hong CH and Islam I, 2013 [ | Dabigatran, Rivaroxaban, Apixaban | Do not change administration | Suspend administration 24 h before surgery and restart drugs after complete haemostasis is achieved at least after 24 h post-operatively |
| Breik O et al., 2013 [ | Dabigatran | Do not discontinue the drug | In consultation with the patient’s physician, consider discontinuing the drug 24 h before procedure (or ≥ 48 h depending on degree of renal impairment) or changing to another anticoagulant preoperatively. |
aLow-medium risk: local anaesthetic infiltration; simple single extraction; soft tissue biopsy ≤ 1 cm; supragingival prophylaxis; placement of rubber dam; restorations; crown preparation; root canal therapy; prosthetic rehabilitation of implant; band and brackets removal; wire insertion. Medium risk: local anaesthesia nerve block; multiple simple extractions ≤ 5 teeth; soft tissue biopsy 1–2.5 cm; placement of single implant; ultrasonic scaling; one to two quadrants (6–12 teeth) deep subgingival scaling; localize periodontal surgery ≤ 5 teeth (Hong and Islam, 2013) [36]
bHigh risk: multiple extraction > 5 teeth; surgical extraction requiring periosteal flap and ostectomy; soft tissue biopsy > 2.5 cm; osseous biopsy; removal of torus; placement of multiple implants; full mouth disinfection with deep subgingival cleaning; periodontal surgery > 5 teeth; endodontic surgery with osseous manipulation (Hong and Islam, 2013) [36]. Co-morbidities: presence of renal impairment; advancing age; major cardiac, respiratory or liver diseases; concomitant use of antiplatelet therapy (van Ryn et al., 2010) [9]