UMEM Educational Pearls

Title: How Do I Emergently Reverse Dabigatran?

Category: Critical Care

Keywords: bleeding, coagulopathy, dabigatran, PCC, (PubMed Search)

Posted: 6/3/2014 by Feras Khan, MD (Updated: 11/22/2024)
Click here to contact Feras Khan, MD

Emergent reversal of Dabigatran

What is it:

Direct thrombin inhibitor used for stroke prevention in non-valvular atrial fibrillation

When do I worry about reversal:

Patients can have clinically important bleeding (GI hemorrhage, or Intracranial bleeding) or need reversal for emergent surgery

Patients with renal failure can have a prolonged medication effect

What can I do:

1.     Activated charcoal: good for recent overdose or recent ingestion (within 2 hours)

2.     Hemodialysis:  around 60-65% can be removed within 2-4 hrs; putting in a dialysis line can be…bloody

3.     FFP: in rat studies, has been shown to reduce the volume of intracranial hemorrhage. Unknown in humans. No good evidence of use based on coagulation mechanisms. Still worth a try though. 

4.     Recombinant activated factor VII: Has been shown to correct the bleeding time in animal studies. Probably the best bet in severe bleeding

5.     Pro-thrombin complex concentrate: has been shown to decrease the bleeding time in animal studies

How do I monitor effect?

No great way here. Check aPTT and thrombin time (TT). At supra-therapeutic doses there is no good test. 

Coming attractions: Dabigatran-fab for emergent reversal (see previous pearl: https://umem.org/educational_pearls/2415/

References

Kaatz, S et al. Guidance on the emergent reversal of oral thrombin and factor Xa inhibitors. American Journal of Hematology. 2012.