Deprescribing anticoagulants at the end of life does not increase clinical thrombosis and may reduce bleeding, which occurs in up to 1 in 10 patients on antithrombotics in their last months of life.
Does deprescribing antithrombotic therapy reduce bleeding without increasing clinical thrombosis in patients at the end-of-life?
Proactive deprescribing of antithrombotic therapy at the end-of-life may reduce bleeding risks without significantly increasing clinical thrombosis.
Antithrombotics at the end-of-life pose a clinical challenge where indication-specific time-to-benefit, bleeding risk, and patient priorities must be reconciled over short prognostic horizons. In this review of the literature, we found that a substantial number of individuals remain on anticoagulants and antiplatelet therapy till the point of death. Prospective ultrasound surveillance studies show a high baseline incidence of asymptomatic proximal deep vein thrombosis at admission but a low short-term incidence of new events during typical hospice stays. Additionally, large home palliative cohorts suggest that deprescribing anticoagulants does not increase clinical thrombosis and may reduce bleeding and facilitate home death. Bleeding on antithrombotics is also common in the last months of life. Clinically relevant bleeding occurs in up to 1 in 10, and fatal hemorrhage has been reported. Cancer-specific factors, chronic or end-stage kidney disease, cytopenias, and drug interactions heighten the risks. Where anticoagulation is pursued, the choice of agent and route should reflect swallowing, nutrition, renal or hepatic function, monitoring capacity, and reversal intent. Structured, shared decision making and proactive deprescribing when benefits no longer outweigh harms are central.
Gurumurthy et al. (Sun,) conducted a review in End-of-life patients on antithrombotic therapy. Antithrombotic therapy deprescribing vs. Continuation of antithrombotic therapy was evaluated. Deprescribing anticoagulants at the end of life does not increase clinical thrombosis and may reduce bleeding, which occurs in up to 1 in 10 patients on antithrombotics in their last months of life.