UMEM Educational Pearls

Category: Toxicology

Title: Dabigatran and Hemodialysis: Watch for the Rebound

Keywords: hemodialysis, dabigatran, rebound (PubMed Search)

Posted: 10/7/2015 by Bryan Hayes, PharmD (Emailed: 10/8/2015) (Updated: 10/8/2015)
Click here to contact Bryan Hayes, PharmD

In patients receiving renal replacement therapy as a treatment modality for dabigatran-related bleeding, watch for a rebound concentration increase after hemodialysis is stopped.

More than 50% of patients demonstrate a rebound effect with a median increase in dabigatran concentration of 33%.

OOIt is unclear whether this rebound effect is clinically
important, and whether this translates to prolonged clini-

It is unclear whether this rebound effect is clinically important, and whether it translates to prolonged clinically relevant bleeding. Extended hemodialysis sessions or consideration of CVVHD should offset this potential problem.

 

Bonus Pearl:

The North American Congress of Clinical Toxicology starts today and runs through October 12. Look for toxicology pearls and updates on Twitter under the official conference hashtag #NACCT15.

References

Chai- Adisaksopha C, et al. Hemodialysis for the treatment of dabigatran-associated bleeding: a case report and systematic review. J Thromb Haemost 2015;13(10):1790-8. [PMID 26270886]

Follow me on Twitter (@PharmERToxGuy)