Oral anticoagulant therapy-associated intracerebral hemorrhage has a mortality in excess of 50%, and current acute treatments lack evidence from randomized controlled trials.
Oral anticoagulant therapy-associated intracerebral hemorrhage
Acute treatments (vitamin K, fresh frozen plasma, prothrombin complex concentrates, recombinant activated factor VII)
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Life-threatening intracranial hemorrhage, predominantly intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH), is the most serious complication of oral anticoagulant therapy (OAT), with mortality in excess of 50%. Early intervention focuses on rapid correction of coagulopathy in order to prevent continued bleeding. SUMMARY OF REVIEW: This article reviews the epidemiology of OAT-associated ICH (OAT-ICH), and current treatment options, with the aim of providing a framework for future studies of unresolved questions. A number of acute treatments are available, but all have a significant risk of inducing thrombosis and other side effects, and vary in their rapidity of effect: vitamin K (very slow response time), fresh frozen plasma (slow response time, large volume of fluid required, transfusion-related acute lung injury), prothrombin complex concentrates, and recombinant activated factor VII. Current practice is to administer a combination of vitamin K and either fresh frozen plasma or prothrombin complex concentrates; the occasional use of recombinant activated factor VII has been reported. No prospective study has addressed the efficacy of, or outcomes from, the use of these practices. CONCLUSIONS: Current management of OAT-ICH is varied and not based on evidence from randomized controlled trials. Well-designed clinical trials are essential if we are to identify the effective acute treatments for OAT-ICH that are urgently needed.
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Thorsten Steiner
Sigmund Freud Privatuniversität Wien
Jonathan Rosand
Broad Institute
Michael N. Diringer
Washington University in St. Louis
Stroke
Massachusetts General Hospital
Heidelberg University
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Steiner et al. (Fri,) conducted a review in Oral anticoagulant therapy-associated intracerebral hemorrhage. Acute treatments (vitamin K, fresh frozen plasma, prothrombin complex concentrates, recombinant activated factor VII) was evaluated. Oral anticoagulant therapy-associated intracerebral hemorrhage has a mortality in excess of 50%, and current acute treatments lack evidence from randomized controlled trials.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a1c62ac26cb5670aa9dc0ac — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1161/01.str.0000196989.09900.f8