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Impact of perioperative direct oral anticoagulant assays: a multicenter cohort study

  • Brandon Stretton
  • , Joshua Kovoor
  • , Stephen Bacchi
  • , Andrew Booth
  • , Sam Gluck
  • , Andrew Vanlint
  • , Mohamed Afzal
  • , Christopher Ovenden
  • , Aashray Gupta
  • , Rajiv Mahajan
  • , Suzanne Edwards
  • , Yvonne Brennan
  • , Jir Ping Boey
  • , Benjamin Reddi
  • , Guy Maddern
  • , Mark Boyd

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

5 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Background: There is little evidence to guide the perioperative management of patients on a direct oral anticoagulant (DOAC) in the absence of a last known dose. Quantitative serum titers may be ordered, but there is little evidence supporting this. 

Aims: This multi-center retrospective cohort study of consecutive surgical in-patients with a DOAC assay, performed over a five-year period, aimed to characterize preoperative DOAC assay orders and their impact on perioperative outcomes.

Materials and methods: Patients prescribed regular DOAC (both prophylactic and therapeutic dosing) with a preoperative DOAC assay were included. The DOAC assay titer was evaluated against endpoints. Further, patients with an assay were compared against anticoagulated patients who did not receive a preoperative DOAC assay. The primary endpoint was major bleeding. Secondary endpoints included perioperative hemoglobin change, blood transfusions, idarucizumab or prothrombin complex concentrate administration, postoperative thrombosis, in-hospital mortality and reoperation. Adjusted and unadjusted linear regression models were used for continuous data. Binary logistic models were performed for dichotomous outcomes 

Results: 1065 patients were included, 232 had preoperative assays. Assays were ordered most commonly by Spinal (11.9%), Orthopedics (15.4%), and Neurosurgery (19.4%). For every 10 ng/ml increase in titer, the hemoglobin decreases by 0.5066 g/L and the odds of a preoperative reversal increases by 13%. Compared to those without an assay, patients with preoperative DOAC assays had odds 1.44× higher for major bleeding, 2.98× higher for in-hospital mortality and 16.3× higher for receiving anticoagulant reversal. 

Conclusion: A preoperative DOAC assay order was associated with worse outcomes despite increased reversal administration. However, the DOAC assay titer can reflect the patient’s likelihood of bleeding.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)155-162
Number of pages8
JournalHospital Practice
Volume51
Issue number3
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2023
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Direct oral anticoagulation
  • Drug monitoring
  • patient safety/outcomes
  • perioperative medicine
  • pharmacology

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