| Literature DB >> 33329805 |
Kwang-Sub Kim1, Jong Wook Song1, Sarah Soh1, Young-Lan Kwak1, Jae-Kwang Shim1.
Abstract
Indications of non-vitamin K antagonist oral anticoagulants (NOACs), consisting of two types: direct thrombin inhibitor (dabigatran) and direct factor Xa inhibitor (rivaroxaban, apixaban, and edoxaban), have expanded over the last few years. Accordingly, increasing number of patients presenting for surgery are being exposed to NOACs, despite the fact that NOACs are inevitably related to increased perioperative bleeding risk. This review article contains recent clinical evidence-based up-to-date recommendations to help set up a multidisciplinary management strategy to provide a safe perioperative milieu for patients receiving NOACs. In brief, despite the paucity of related clinical evidence, several key recommendations can be drawn based on the emerging clinical evidence, expert consensus, and predictable pharmacological properties of NOACs. In elective surgeries, it seems safe to perform high-bleeding risk surgeries 2 days after cessation of NOAC, regardless of the type of NOAC. Neuraxial anesthesia should be performed 3 days after cessation of NOACs. In both instances, dabigatran needs to be discontinued for an additional 1 or 2 days, depending on the decrease in renal function. NOACs do not require a preoperative heparin bridge therapy. Emergent or urgent surgeries should preferably be delayed for at least 12 h from the last NOAC intake (better if > 24 h). If surgery cannot be delayed, consider using specific reversal agents, which are idarucizumab for dabigatran and andexanet alfa for rivaroxaban, apixaban, and edoxaban. If these specific reversal agents are not available, consider using prothrombin complex concentrates.Entities:
Keywords: Anticoagulants; Blood loss, surgical; Emergency; Non-vitamin K antagonist; Reversal
Year: 2020 PMID: 33329805 PMCID: PMC7713812 DOI: 10.17085/apm.2020.15.2.133
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Anesth Pain Med (Seoul) ISSN: 1975-5171
Fig. 1.Comparison of action mechanisms between warfarin and non-vitamin K antagonists.
Pharmacological Properties of Non-vitamin K Antagonists
| Non-vitamin K antagonists | Dabigatran | Rivaroxaban | Apixaban | Edoxaban |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Inhibitory target | Thrombin | Factor Xa | Factor Xa | Factor Xa |
| Time to peak | 1–2 h | 2–4 h | 1–4 h | 1–2 h |
| Half-life | 12–17 h | 5–9 h | 8–15 h | 10–14 h |
| Renal elimination | 80% | 33% | 20% | 50% |
| Dialyzable | Yes | No | No | No |
| Reversal agent | Idarucizumab | Andexanet | Andexanet | Andexanet |
Fig. 2.Perioperative management of non-vitamin K antagonists for elective surgery.
Reversal Agents and Alternative Options for Patients on Non-vitamin K Antagonist Requiring Emergent/Urgent Surgery
| Non-vitamin K antagonists | Dabigatran | Rivaroxaban, apixaban, edoxaban |
|---|---|---|
| Reversal agents | Idarucizumab | Andexanet alfa |
| Mode of action | Humanized monoclonal antibody fragment | Inactive variant of human recombinant factor Xa |
| Binds to dabigatran with 350-fold higher affinity than thrombin | Binds to factor Xa inhibitors with similar affinity to native factor Xa | |
| Also binds to heparin-antithrombin III complex | ||
| Dosage | IV bolus of 5 g (2.5 g over 5–10 min × 2) | IV bolus over 15–30 min + 2 h of continuous infusion: |
| 1) 400 mg bolus, 480 mg infusion (rivaroxaban intake > 7 h or apixaban) | ||
| 2) 800 mg bolus, 960 mg infusion (rivaroxaban intake within 7 h [or unknown] or edoxaban) | ||
| Alternative options | Hemodialysis for 4 h | Hemodialysis not applicable |
| PCC, 2 doses of 4-factor PCC or bolus of 50 IU/kg (+ 25 IU/kg as necessary) | ||
| Tranexamic acid, bolus 10–30 mg/kg (10–20 min) + continuous infusion 3–5 mg/kg/h | ||
IV: intravenous, PCC: prothrombin complex concentrates.
Fig. 3.Perioperative management of non-vitamin K antagonists for emergent/urgent surgery. PT: prothrombin time, aPTT: activated partial thromboplastin time, dTT: diluted thrombin time, ECT: ecarin-based assay.