4.4 Review

Urgent procedures or surgeries in patients receiving oral anticoagulants: a systematic literature review

Journal

JOURNAL OF THROMBOSIS AND THROMBOLYSIS
Volume 55, Issue 2, Pages 197-202

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11239-022-02739-w

Keywords

Oral anticoagulant therapy; Perioperative management; Direct oral anticoagulants; Warfarin

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Limited data are available on the frequency of urgent surgical emergencies among patients receiving oral anticoagulants. Urgent surgery appears to be common, yet understudied, complication during oral anticoagulant treatment. Further research is needed to evaluate the management and outcomes in this setting.
There are limited data about the frequency of urgent surgical emergencies among patients receiving oral anticoagulants (OACs). We conducted a systematic literature review of Medline and EMBASE for published English-language articles of adult patients receiving oral anticoagulant treatment (vitamin K antagonists, apixaban, dabigatran, edoxaban, rivaroxaban) that reported on patients experiencing unplanned emergent or urgent surgery/procedure or trauma. Randomized trials, observational studies, and case series (50-100 cases) were included. The primary outcome was the frequency of unplanned urgent surgery or invasive procedures among OAC-treated patients with a focus on those not precipitated by the presence of major bleeding. The protocol was not registered. Funding was provided by Covis Pharmaceuticals. The search yielded 1367 potential studies of which 34 were included in the final review. One study reported the rate of urgent surgery/procedures among a large cohort of patients treated with dabigatran or warfarin for atrial fibrillation (similar to 1% per year). Another study reported the rate of bleeding or urgent surgery among OAC-treated patients experiencing a fracture or trauma (0.489% per patient-year). The remaining 32 studies were cohorts of OAC-treated patients who received reversal or hemostatic therapies for major bleeding or urgent surgery. A median of 28.8% of these patients underwent surgery or invasive procedure. Urgent surgery appears to be a common, yet understudied complication during OAC treatment potentially associated with high rates of adverse outcomes. With increased eligibility for OACs, future studies evaluating the management and outcomes in this setting are needed.

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