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Care of the Anti-coagulated Trauma Patient. Julie Mayglothling, MD, FACEP Emergencies in Medicine March 8 th , 2012. Dabigatran, Apixaban, Rivaroxaban- Oh My! Emerging Anticoagulants and Their Impact on Trauma. Julie Mayglothling, MD, FACEP Emergencies in Medicine March 8 th , 2012.
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Care of the Anti-coagulated Trauma Patient Julie Mayglothling, MD, FACEP Emergencies in Medicine March 8th, 2012
Dabigatran, Apixaban, Rivaroxaban- Oh My!Emerging Anticoagulants and Their Impact on Trauma Julie Mayglothling, MD, FACEP Emergencies in Medicine March 8th, 2012
Objectives Discuss evaluation and management of injured patients on anti-coagulant medications Antiplatelet, coumadin, newer anticoagulants Review reversal agents used in anti-coagulated trauma patients Discuss potential reversal of new agents
The Breakdown… Anticoagulant Anti-platelet Coumadin Dabigatran, Rivaroxaban Severity of Illness Acute hemorrhage/hemodynamically unstable Intracranial Hemorrhage Mildly injured/Asymptomatic Age
Antiplatelet agents 5 studies reviewed (3 of 5 show increased risk) Ages > 50, > 60, no age limit Significant mechanism (fall?) Associated with morbidity, possibly mortality Especially in age > 50
Major Trauma >1.2 million patients >36,000 warfarin users 4% in 2006 12.8% in patients > 65
Major Trauma Warfarin use associated with double mortality (9.3%) Both in all patients and patients > 65 All patients and all injury patterns Most pronounced for TBI patients < 65
Warfarin 6 of 8 studies found increased risk of morbidity and mortality with warfarin Especially in elderly patients (regardless of ISS) Level of INR associated with mortality
Coumadin in Minor Head Trauma 5 Retrospective studies 65-144 patients in each 2 studies support clinical exam 2 studies state scan regardless of normal neuro exam 1 study uses INR cut-off 2.37 Age certainly a factor Unclear for patients < 50
What about a normal head CT? • 81 years old • Fall with no LOC • INR 2.8 • Initial CT with no ICH • Dispo?
To observe, or not to observe… • European guidelines • Negative head CT 24 hours observation followed by a 2nd head CT (Vos. Eur J Neurol. 2002) • Menditto (Ann Emerg Med 2012) • 97 patients with neg head CT (To Obs) • 5 patients (6%) with delayed bleed • Increased risk with INR > 3
Reversal of Anti-Coagulation Anti-platelet agents Platelets Desmopressin (ddAVP) (0.3 mcg/kg) Recombinant activated factor VIIa (big gun…)
Thromboelastography (TEG) fibrinolysis Activated clotting time
Reversal of Anti-Coagulation Warfarin Vitamin K Fresh Frozen Plasma Cryoprecipitate Prothrombin complex concentrate Activated Factor VIIa
Reversal of Anti-Coagulation Vitamin K Cofactor II, VII, IX, X 10 mg IV (no IM or SQ) Full effect 12-24 hours Repeated doses as needed
Fresh Frozen Plasma Delayed time to reversal Thawing and cross-matching Risks of Volume overload 10-15 mL/kg = 700 mL = 3 units FFP TRALI ABO incompatibilities
Prothrombin Complex Concentrate Concentrate of Factors II, VII, IX, X, Prot C&S Factor IX is the workhorse (dosing) pooled human plasma from healthy donors Half Life: Factor VII: 2-4 hrs Factor IX: 24 hrs Complication rate < 1% Availability in US
Activated Factor VIIa Never been formally studied for reversal of warfarin in TBI Non-anticoag pts! Half life ~ 2.5 hours Add Vitamin K and FFP or PCC Role and dose debatable
Dabigatran (Pradaxa) Direct thrombin inhibitor (DTI) Better than coumadin Works better! Decreased risk of bleeding No monitoring One dose fits all No dietary interactions No P450
What’s important to know? • Peak effect 2-3 hours • 80% excreted (unchanged) in urine • Normal renal function • ½ life 13 hours • Any renal dysfunction has longer duration • Measurement (aPTT, TT, ECT) • Prolonged ACT IN rTEG
Factor Xa Inhibitors Rivaroxaban Direct competitive inhibitor ROCKET study Similar efficacy and decreased bleeding than coumadin Apixaban Direct competitive inhibitor Aristotle trial Decreased stroke, decreased bleeding
Sites of Action of New Anticoagulant Agents Figure 1: Site of action of new anticoagulant drugs. From Brighton T. Experimental and clinical pharmacology: new oral anticoagulant drugs – mechanisms of action. Aust Prescr. 2010;33:38-41. Reprinted with permission from Australian Prescriber.
Proposed Reversal Agents • Dialysis • Package insert • Logistics??? • Activated charcoal (within 2-3 hours) • Vitamin K • FFP • PCC • Factor VIIa
Sites of Action of New Anticoagulant Agents Figure 1: Site of action of new anticoagulant drugs. From Brighton T. Experimental and clinical pharmacology: new oral anticoagulant drugs – mechanisms of action. Aust Prescr. 2010;33:38-41. Reprinted with permission from Australian Prescriber.
The Only Study!!! • Cofact (4 factor PCC) • 12 healthy volunteers, Crossover study • Dabigatran or Rivaroxaban • Totally reversed Rivaroxaban • Prolongation of PT reversed • No effect of Dabigatran • Increased aPTT NOT reversed • No effect on ecarin CT and TT
Recommendations for Reversal Intracranial hemorrhage or life-threatening traumatic hemorrhage Anti-platelet therapy Platelet transfusion (10 pack) Possibly ddAVP (0.3 mcg/kg) Warfarin Vitamin K 10 mg IV + FFP 15 mL/kg Use of PCC may increase in the future rFVIIa role is debatable
Reversal of the new guys… • Dialysis • 80% of dabigatran is renally excreted • 66% of rivaroxaban • 25% of apixaban
Conclusions • Patients on oral anti-coagulant therapy have increased morbidity and mortality after trauma • Reversal strategies for anti-platelet and warfarin are fairly well established • New DTI’s and Factor Xa inhibitors pose a unique challenge • Dialysis (not always feasible) • PCC (possible but poor data) • Factor VIIa (unclear)