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Managing patients taking anticoagulants and antiplatelets prior to minor procedures and surgery
I always get asked by dentists and sometimes patients when to stop anti-platelets, e.g. aspirin, or anticoagulants prior to procedures, e.g. dental extractions and joint replacements.
I understand the situation depends on the patient’s medical condition as well as the planned procedure, however, I would really
appreciate if you could give me a resource or publication to look at and understand more about this subject?
Dr Frat Yousif
Response from the bpacnz editorial team:
As the correspondent suggests, the planned procedure and the patient’s medical condition(s) heavily influence whether an antithrombotic should be stopped prior to surgery.
Ultimately, this decision should be individualised; weighing the added risk and consequences of bleeding (Table 1) against the risk of experiencing a thromboembolic event if
treatment is stopped, and taking into consideration the patient’s medical history.1,2 In clinical scenarios involving patients with a significant cardiac history or high-risk procedures,
consultation with the cardiologist, surgeon and anaesthesiologist is also likely to be necessary.2
Table 1. Risk of bleeding associated with invasive surgical procedures1
Minimal risk |
Low risk |
High risk |
- Minor dermatological procedures e.g. removal of basal or squamous carcinomas or premalignant lesions
- Minor dental procedures e.g. dental extractions, restorations, prosthetics or endodontics
- Cataract procedures
|
- Abdominal hernia repair or hysterectomy
- Arthroscopy
- Bronchoscopy, including biopsy
- Coronary angiography
- Cutaneous or lymph node biopsy
- Epidural injections with INR < 1.2
- Gastrointestinal endoscopy, including biopsy
- Haemorrhoid removal
- Laparoscopic cholecystectomy
- Pacemaker or cardioverter defibrillator implantation (although withholding DOAC is still recommended)
- Surgery of the hand, foot or shoulder
|
- Any major operation lasting more than 45 minutes
- Bowel resection
- Cancer surgery
- Cardiac surgery
- Intracranial or spinal surgery
- Colonic polyp resection (≥ 1 cm)
- Gastrointestinal surgery
- Major surgery with extensive tissue damage
- Major orthopaedic surgery
- Nephrectomy or kidney biopsy
- Reconstructive plastic surgery
- Surgery in highly vascular areas e.g. kidneys, liver and spleen
- Urological surgery
|
Publications by Keeling et al3 and Armstrong et al4 provide recommendations based on the bleeding risk of a procedure and type of antithrombotic used. Overall,
evidence suggests that many minor procedures can be performed in primary care without stopping the patient’s normal regimen (e.g. most minor dermatological procedures).3,4 In addition,
continued treatment is likely suitable during some minimally invasive surgeries performed in secondary care, such as cataracts, joint injections and pacemaker insertion.4
For other procedures, however, the guidance is not as clear cut. For example, in hip fracture surgery patients may continue an antiplatelet, although anticoagulation
should generally be stopped.5
The American Dental Association (ADA)6 provides guidance specific to dental procedures and indicates there is strong evidence for continuing “older” anticoagulants
(e.g. warfarin) and antiplatelets (e.g. aspirin, clopidogrel, ticagrelor) during both minor procedures and invasive dental surgeries (e.g. oral tumour removal). There is also
limited evidence that direct oral anticoagulants (DOACs; e.g. dabigatran, rivaroxaban) can be continued, however, the ADA acknowledges that there is “no direct evidence from
prospective trials comparing different periprocedural management strategies” for these medicines.6
If the risk of bleeding is considered too great and a decision for withdrawal is made, the timing of the last dose depends on the half-life of the medicine and,
for DOACs, the patient’s renal function.1,2 Table 2 provides recommendations on when to stop various antithrombotics before surgery based
on information from Hornor et al2
and PHARMAC/bpacnz bleeding management guidelines.1 Following surgery,
the decision on when to restart treatment should be patient-specific and only considered
once the risk of bleeding is minimal.2
Table 2. Recommendations for stopping antithrombotics prior to surgery1,2
Medicine |
Estimated Half-life |
Renal function (based on creatinine clearance; mL/min) |
Last dose before surgery |
Aspirin |
3-10 hours |
No specific recommendations for stopping prior to surgery based on renal function |
7 days |
Clopidogrel |
8 hours |
5-7 days |
Ticagrelor |
9 hours |
5-7 days |
Warfarin* |
20-60 hours |
5 days |
Dabigatran |
12 hours for normal renal function; longer for renal impairment |
≥ 80
≥ 50 to < 80
≥ 30 to < 50
< 30 |
1-2 days
1-3 days
2-4 days
Contraindicated
|
Rivaroxaban |
5-9 hours for normal renal function; longer for renal impairment |
≥ 50 to < 80
≥ 30 to < 50
< 30 |
1–3 days
2–3 days
Seek specialist advice
|
* In patients who stop warfarin for a procedure and remain at high thrombotic risk, “bridging” treatment with a
low molecular weight heparin or unfractionated heparin may be necessary.2
References
- PHARMAC and bpacnz. Guidelines for testing and perioperative management of dabigatran and rivaroxaban:
for possible use in local management protocols. 2018. Available from:
https://bpac.org.nz/2018/bleeding-guidelines.aspx (Accessed Dec, 2018).
- Hornor MA, Duane TM, Ehlers AP, et al. American College of Surgeons’ guidelines for the perioperative
management of antithrombotic medication. Journal of the American College of Surgeons 2018;227:521-536.e1.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jamcollsurg.2018.08.183
- Keeling D, Tait RC, Watson H, et al. Peri-operative management of anticoagulation and antiplatelet therapy.
British Journal of Haematology 2016;175:602–13. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/bjh.14344
- Armstrong MJ, Gronseth G, Anderson DC, et al. Summary of evidence-based guideline: periprocedural management
of antithrombotic medications in patients with ischemic cerebrovascular disease: Report of the Guideline Development
Subcommittee of the American Academy of Neurology. Neurology 2013;80:2065–9.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1212/WNL.0b013e318294b32d
- Yassa R, Khalfaoui MY, Hujazi I, et al. Management of anticoagulation in hip fractures: a pragmatic approach.
EFORT Open Reviews 2017;2:394–402. http://dx.doi.org/10.1302/2058-5241.2.160083
- American Dental Association. Anticoagulant and antiplatelet management and dental procedures. 2018. Available
from:
https://www.ada.org/en/member-center/oral-health-topics/anticoagulant-antiplatelet-medications-and-dental- (Accessed Dec, 2018).