| Literature DB >> 28243155 |
Mineto Kamata1, Roby Sebastian2, Patrick I McConnell3, Daniel Gomez4, Aymen Naguib2, Joseph D Tobias5.
Abstract
Heparin-induced thrombocytopenia (HIT) can cause life-threatening complications following the administration of heparin. Discontinuation of all sources of heparin exposure and the use of alternative agents for anticoagulation are necessary when HIT is suspected or diagnosed. We present the successful use of bivalirudin anticoagulation in an adolescent patient during cardiopulmonary bypass who underwent both placement of a left ventricular assist device and subsequent heart transplantation within a 36-hour period. The pathophysiology and diagnosis of HIT are reviewed, previous reports of the use of direct thrombin inhibitors for cardiac surgery are presented, and potential dosing regimens for bivalirudin are discussed.Entities:
Keywords: anticoagulation; bivalirudin; cardiopulmonary bypass; heart transplant
Year: 2017 PMID: 28243155 PMCID: PMC5317301 DOI: 10.2147/IMCRJ.S118250
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int Med Case Rep J ISSN: 1179-142X
Bivalirudin dosing and ACT values during CPB for LVAD implantation
| Time | Bivalirudin bolus dose | Bivalirudin continuous dose | ACT | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Start of case | 126 (baseline) | |||
| 50 mg for CPB priming | ||||
| 1.5 mg/kg | Infusion started at 2.0 mg/kg/hour | |||
| CPB | Same | 599 | Hypothermia to 34°C | |
| CPB | Same | 456 | ||
| CPB | Increased to 2.25 mg/kg/hour | APTT | ||
| CPB | 0.5 mg/kg | Increased to 2.5 mg/kg/hour | 405 | |
| CPB | Same | 529 | ||
| CPB | Same | 509 | APTT | |
| CPB | 0.5 mg/kg | Same | 514 | Clot noted in CPB reservoir |
| CPB | Same | Warming to 37°C | ||
| CPB | Same | 685 | Nitric oxide started (for RV dysfunction) | |
| CPB | 0.5 mg/kg for CPB reservoir | Infusion discontinued | Weaned from CPB |
Abbreviations: ACT, activated clotting time; APTT, activated partial thromboplastin time; CPB, cardiopulmonary bypass; LVAD, left ventricular assist device; RV, right ventricle.
Bivalirudin dosing and ACT values during CPB for heart transplant
| Time | Bivalirudin bolus dose | Bivalirudin continuous dose | ACT | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Start of case | 130 (baseline) | |||
| 50 mg for CPB priming | ||||
| 1.5 mg/kg | Infusion started at 2.5 mg/kg/hour | |||
| CPB | Same | 397 | Hypothermia to 30°C | |
| CPB | 0.5 mg/kg | Infusion increased to 2.75 mg/kg/hour | 480 | APTT 197 |
| CPB | 0.7 mg/kg | Same | 466 | |
| CPB | 0.25 mg/kg | Same | 534 | |
| CPB | 0.25 mg/kg | Same | 534 | |
| CPB | 0.1 mg/kg | Same | 559 | |
| CPB | 0.8 mg/kg | Same | 241 | |
| CPB | Same | 534 | Warming to 37°C | |
| CPB | Same | 635 | ||
| CPB | 0.25 mg/kg | Same | ||
| CPB | Same | 645 | ||
| CPB | Same | 730 | ||
| CPB | Infusion discontinued | |||
| CPB | 680 | |||
| CPB | Weaned from CPB | |||
| CPB | 0.5 mg/kg for CPB reservoir | |||
| 30 minutes after CPB | 374 |
Abbreviations: ACT, activated clotting time; APTT, activated partial thromboplastin time; CPB, cardiopulmonary bypass.
Nonheparin anticoagulation
| Anticoagulant | Administration | Anticoagulant monitoring | Metabolism | Elimination half-life | Antidote |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Direct thrombin inhibitor | |||||
| Hirudin | IV, subcutaneous | ECT | Renal | 60–100 minutes | Meizothrombin, hemofiltration |
| Lepirudin | IV, subcutaneous | APTT and ECT | Renal | 80 minutes | N/A |
| Bivalirudin | IV, subcutaneous | APTT, ACT, and ECT | Enzymatic and renal | 25 minutes | N/A |
| Argatroban | IV | APTT and ACT | Hepatobiliary | 40–60 minutes | N/A |
| Heparinoid Danaparoid | IV, subcutaneous | Antifactor Xa | Renal | 18–28 hours | N/A |
| Factor Xa inhibitor Fondaparinux | Subcutaneous | Antifactor Xa | Renal | 15 hours | N/A |
| Antifibrinogen agent Ancrod | IV | Fibrinogen level | Reticuloendothelial | 3–5 hours | FFP, cryoprecipitate |
| GP IIb–IIIa inhibitor Tirofiban | IV | N/A | Renal | 2 hours | N/A |
Notes:
No longer available for clinic use.
Not available in the USA.
Abbreviations: ACT, activated clotting time; APTT, activated thromboplastin time; ECT, ecarin clotting time; FFP, fresh frozen plasma; IV, intravenous; N/A, not applicable.
Case reports of bivalirudin use in the pediatric population
| Author and reference | Patient age | Initial bivalirudin bolus and (infusion) dose | Monitoring and target | Summary |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cardiac surgery | ||||
| Almond et al | 5 years | 0.15 mg/kg (total 0.9 mg/kg) and 50 mg for CPB priming (0.25 mg/kg/hour) | ACT >400 seconds | The patient underwent orthotropic cardiac transplant with bivalirudin. Significant bleeding occurred after CPB that improved with blood products, factor VIIa, and ultrafiltration |
| Gates et al | 5 months | 1 mg/kg (total 1.5 mg/kg) and 50 mg/400 mL for CPB priming (2.5 mg/kg/hour) | The patient underwent stage 2 Norwood. Hemostasis was achieved soon after MUF completion without blood products. Chest tube output in the first 4 hours after CPB was 4.5 mL/kg | |
| Dragomer et al | 17 months | 0.5 mg/kg (total 2.5 mg/kg) and CPB priming dose was not recorded (2.5 mg/kg/hour) | The ACT did not achieve the target range even after a total of 2.5 mg/kg of bivalirudin. Postoperative chest tube bleeding was minimal | |
| Argueta-Morales et al | 2 cases: 3 years and 5 months | 1 mg/kg and 50 mg for CPB priming (2.5 mg/kg/hour) | Bivalirudin was used for CPB for aortic valve repair and tricuspid valvuloplasty in two pediatric patients | |
| Faella et al | 11 years | 1 mg/kg (total 1.9 mg/kg) and 50 mg for CPB priming (2.5 mg/kg/hour) | APTT 2.5× baseline or ACT >400 seconds, whichever was lower | The patient was successfully placed on the ventricular assist device using bivalirudin during CPB |
| Extracorporeal life support | ||||
| Pollak et al | 5 days | 0.4 mg/kg (0.15 mg/kg/h) | ACT 180–200 seconds | To maintain the target ACT, bivalirudin infusion had to be increased to 1.1–1.6 mg/kg/hour |
| Ranucci et al | 21 cases: 9 pediatric | Heparin 100 IU/kg bolus (0.03–0.05 mg/kg/hour) | ACT 160–180 seconds, APTT 50–80 seconds, and TGE r-time 12–30 minutes | A retrospective study comparing bivalirudin and heparin use for postoperative ECMO. Bivalirudin group had a better coagulation profile, less bleeding, and fewer allogeneic transfusions |
| Nagle et al | 12 cases: 1 day and 6 years | 0.1 (range: 0.04–0.14) mg/kg (0.05–0.3 mg/kg/hour) | ACT 200–220 seconds | There was an observed increase in dose requirements with time, and inter- and interpatient variability in dose requirements |
| Preston et al | 8 years | 0.75–1.6 mg/kg (1.2–1.8 mg/kg/hour) | APTT 60–80 seconds | Successful plasma exchange in a patient on VV ECMO support with continuous bivalirudin |
| Ventricular assist device | ||||
| Rutledge et al | 6 cases: 0.8–14 years | None (0.685 [range: 0.1–0.8] mg/kg/hour) | APTT 1.5–2.5× baseline and ACT 400–500 seconds for heart transplantation | The antithrombotic therapy was achieved by the combination of bivalirudin and epoprostenol. Five of the 6 patients underwent heart transplantation with bivalirudin ± epoprostenol or heparin |
| Cardiac catheterization | ||||
| Zamora | 2 months | 0.5 mg/kg (0.25 mg/kg/hour) | ACT >200 seconds | A patient with anti-thrombin deficiency underwent stent placement |
| Breinholt et al | 2 years | 0.75 mg/kg (1.75 mg/kg/hour) | ACT (not specified) | A patient with HIT-2 underwent recanalization of an occluded SVC and stent placement |
| Forbes et al | 110 cases: neonate to 16 years | 0.75 mg/kg (1.75 mg/kg/hour) | PK/PD response of bivalirudin in the pediatric population was similar to that in adult | |
| Treatment of thrombosis | ||||
| Young et al | 16 cases: 0.5–6 months | 0.125, 0.25, or 0.5 mg/kg (0.125 or 0.25 mg/kg/hour) | APTT 1.5–2.5× baseline | A dose–response effect was seen for the continuous infusion, but not the bolus dose. Significant bleeding occurred in two cases |
| Rayapudi et al | 16 cases: neonate to 14 years | 0–0.25 mg/kg (0.05–0.25 mg/kg/hour) | Positive correlation between the infusion rate and the APTT was observed. One patient developed hematuria after urethral catheter insertion | |
| Malloy et al | 2 months | No bolus (0.1 mg/kg/hour) | The infusion was increased to a maximum of 0.58 mg/kg/hour | |
| O’Brien et al | 18 cases: 9 months to 17 years | 0.125 mg/kg (0.125 mg/kg/hour) | Following the bolus dose and the initial infusion rate, the majority of APTT values were within the target range | |
Abbreviations: ACT, activated clotting time; APTT, activated partial thromboplastin time; CPB, cardiopulmonary bypass; ECMO, extracorporeal membrane oxygenation; HIT, heparin-induced thrombocytopenia; MUF, modified ultrafiltration; PK/PD, pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamics; SVC, superior vena cava; TGE, thromboelastography; VV, venovenous.