| Literature DB >> 28210988 |
Milan R Vosko1, Christof Bocksrucker2, Rafał Drwiła3, Petr Dulíček4, Tomas Hauer5, Johannes Mutzenbach6, Christoph J Schlimp7, David Špinler8,9, Thomas Wolf10, Daša Zugwitz11.
Abstract
Non-vitamin K antagonist oral anticoagulants (NOACs) have a favorable benefit-risk profile compared with vitamin K antagonists. However, the lack of specific reversal agents has made the management of some patients receiving long-term treatment with NOACs problematic in emergency situations such as major bleeding events or urgent procedures. Idarucizumab, a fully humanized Fab antibody fragment that binds specifically and with high affinity to dabigatran, was recently approved for use in adult patients treated with dabigatran when rapid reversal of its anticoagulant effect is required. Clinical experience with idarucizumab is currently limited. We report 11 real-life clinical cases in which idarucizumab was used after multidisciplinary consultation in a variety of emergency situations including severe postoperative bleeding, emergency high-bleeding-risk surgery (hip/spine surgery and neurosurgery), invasive diagnostic testing (lumbar puncture), intracranial bleeding (pre-pontine subarachnoid hemorrhage and lobar intracerebral hemorrhage) and thrombolysis with recombinant tissue plasminogen activator for acute ischemic stroke. This case series illustrates the role of idarucizumab in improving patient safety in rare emergency situations requiring rapid reversal of the anticoagulant effect of dabigatran, while highlighting the importance of information and education about the availability and appropriate use of this recently approved specific reversal agent.Entities:
Keywords: Anticoagulation reversal; Critical bleeding; Direct oral anticoagulants; Emergency procedures; Non-valvular atrial fibrillation; Non-vitamin K antagonist oral anticoagulants
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28210988 PMCID: PMC5337234 DOI: 10.1007/s11239-017-1476-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Thromb Thrombolysis ISSN: 0929-5305 Impact factor: 2.300
Selected information on patients’ conditions, indications for the use of idarucizumab, coagulation test results and clinical outcomes
| Patient presentation | Idarucizumab administration | Coagulation tests | Clinical outcome | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Before idarucizumab administration | After idarucizumab administration | |||
| 83-year-old male |
| dTT: 209 ng/mL | dTT: <32 ng/mL | Discharged to a local hospital for further management on postoperative day 8; uneventful follow-up on postoperative day 30 |
| 93-year-old female |
| TT: 170 s | TT: 17 s | Postoperative monitoring in the ICU for 4 days with no complications; transfer to geriatric rehabilitation |
| 70-year-old male |
| dTT: 54 ng/mL | dTT: 0 ng/mL | Successful surgery with no complications |
| 78-year-old male |
| TT: >120 s | TT: 18.4 s | Successful surgery without complications; no neurological deficit except for very mild weakness of acral parts of lower extremities |
| 87-year-old male |
| dTT: 168 ng/mL | dTT: 20 ng/mL | Discharged after 5 days with good neurological outcome |
| 81-year-old female |
| aPTT: 32.8 s | No coagulation tests performed | Lumbar puncture performed with no bleeding complication; neuroinfection disproved and drug (opiate) intoxication diagnosed |
| 44-year-old woman |
| TT: 73.9 s | TT: 16.7 s | Patient discharged after follow-up imaging (no aneurysm, no vasospasm and no intracerebral hemorrhage) |
| 88-year-old man |
| TT > 150 s | TT < 32 s | Patient transferred to a normal neurological ward in stable condition |
| 78-year-old man |
| dTT: 134 ng/mL | dTT: <32 ng/mL | Thrombolysis with rt-PA (reduced dose 0.6 mg/kg) was performed without complications |
| 84-year-old man |
| dTT: 79 ng/mL | dTT: < 20 ng/mL | Thrombolysis with rt-PA (70 mg) was performed without complications |
| 68-year-old man |
| aPTT: 34 s | aPTT: 33 s | Transcranial Doppler sonography shortly after rt-PA infusion: regular blood flow in both posterior cerebral arteries. Patient discharged on day 3 with slightly improved hemianopsia (NIHSS 3, mRS 2) |
aPTT activated partial thromboplastin time, b.i.d. twice daily, CrCl creatinine clearance, CRP C-reactive protein, dTT dilute thrombin time, DVT deep vein thrombosis, eGFR estimated glomerular filtration rate, Hb hemoglobin concentration, ICU intensive care unit, mRS modified rankin scale, NIHSS National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale, NVAF non-valvular atrial fibrillation, PLT platelet, rt-PA recombinant tissue plasminogen activator, TT thrombin time