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Anticoagulant therapies: how do they work?. Mary Byrne, St James’s Hospital. Outline of presentation . Anticoagulants Warfarin Heparin Dabigatran Laboratory monitoring. Warfarin . Most widely used anticoagulant in world 1% of UK population (8% of >80yrs)
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Anticoagulant therapies: how do they work? Mary Byrne, St James’s Hospital
Outline of presentation • Anticoagulants • Warfarin • Heparin • Dabigatran • Laboratory monitoring
Warfarin • Most widely used anticoagulant in world • 1% of UK population (8% of >80yrs) • 40,000 people on Warfarin in Ireland
Clinical indications • Treatment of venous thrombosis (VTE), pulmonary embolism(PE) and their extension. • Prophylaxis and treatment of thromboembolic complications associated with rheumatic heart disease, atrial fibrillation (AF) and/or prosthetic heart valve replacement. • Reduction in the risk of death, recurrent myocardial infarction (MI), and thromboembolic events such as stroke or systemic embolisation after myocardial infarction.
Aim of Warfarin therapy • Maintain a level of anticoagulation • Minimise the risk of thrombosis • Minimise the risk of haemorrhagic complication • Dependant on the length of time and extent that a persons INR stays outside the therapeutic range
History of Warfarin discovery • 1920s: prairies of North America and Canada • Cattle dying of internal bleeding with no precipitating cause • Query dietary problem • “Sweet clover disease” • Farmers recommended not to feed cattle the mouldy sweet clover hay
History of Warfarin discovery • Karl Link experimented with “uncoagulated” blood from affected cattle • Team isolated compound • 3,3’-methylene-bis[4-hyfroxycoumarin] • Oxidised in mouldy hay to form dicoumarol.
History of Warfarin discovery • Research work funded by the: • Wisconsin Alumni Research Foundation • Patented in 1941 • Variation of dicoumarol (warfarin) patented as rat poison in 1948 • Transition to clinical application (Coumadin)
The need for anticoagulation • Why do thromboses occur? • How are they treated? • How are they prevented? • Thrombosis and haemostasis
What is haemostasis? Balance between four major components Vascular endothelium Platelets Coagulation pathway Procoagulant Anticoagulant Fibrinolysis
Coagulation pathway • Procoagulant proteins • Anticoagulant proteins • Balance between activation and control of coagulation
Mechanism of action of Warfarin • Interferes with the biochemistry of vitamin K dependant coagulation factors in the liver • Vitamin K dependant coagulation factors • Factor II VII IX X Protein C and Protein S • Involved in coagulation and anticoagulation pathways in haemostasis
Coagulation pathway Warfarin
Vitamin K cycle and warfarin Active coagulation factors Warfarin
Warfarin therapy • Inter-individual differences • Narrow therapeutic range • Bleeding risk • Outside anticoagulation range • Higher mortality • Increased risk of stroke • Increased rate of hospitalisation
Warfarin • Environmental factors • Vitamin K intake • Illness • Concurrent medication • Genetic variation (VKORC1 and CYP2C9)
Warfarin interactions • Pharmacokinetic interactions • Drugs which interfere with clearance • Antibiotics which affect intestinal flora • Pharmacodynamic interactions • Drugs which have anti-platelet effect (aspirin and NSAIDS) • Drugs associated with falls in the elderly
Drug interactions • Reduce anticoagulant effect • Reduce absorption (cholestyramine) • Potentiate anticoagulant effect • Inhibit clearance (metronidazole, amiodarone) • Inhibit anticoagulant effect • Enhance clearance (barbiturates)
Warfarin and bleeding • Major bleeding events 7.2/100 patient years • Fatal bleeding events 1.3/100 patient years • Bleeding • May be lower in specialised anticoagulation clinics • More likely within the first 90 days • Can occur when INR is raised or within the therapeutic range • Wadelius M and Pirmohamed M. Pharmacogenetics of warfarin: current status and future challenges. The pharacogenetics Journal (2007) 7, 99-111
Reversal of warfarin • Discontinue warfarin • Vitamin K • Prothrombin complex concentrates
Monitoring Warfarin therapy • Laboratory testing • Point of care testing • Self testing • Test = INR (International Normalised Ratio)
INR PT (Prothrombin Time) • INR calculated from the Prothrombin Time (PT) • Reported as time (sec), INR • Sensitive to factor II V VII X fibrinogen • Normal range variations • PT: • Measures the plasma clotting time in the presence of a highly sensitive activating reagent
INR • Surrogate measure of the effectiveness of Warfarin therapy • Different reagent and analytical systems are widely used
INR • ISI: International Sensitivity Index • Compares local reagent with international reference preparation
Delivery of Warfarin monitoring • In-patient • Out-patient • Warfarin clinic (SJH: 1500 active patients) • Primary Care Team • Warfarin clinic
Delivery of Warfarin monitoring • Point of care / self testing • Coagucheck XS Plus • Hemosense INRatio • Protime 3 (ITC)
Published 2009 • 162 patients recruited • Crossover study • Self selected group • On long tem anticoagulant
Other anticoagulants • Indirect Xa inhibitors (Heparin) • Direct thrombin inhibitors (Dabigitran, Argatroban) • Direct Xa inhibitors • Different modes of action on coagulation cascade
Other anticoagulants Indirect Xa inhibitors (Heparin) Direct thrombin inhibitors (Dabigatran, Argatroban) Different modes of action on coagulation cascade
Indirect Xa inhibitors • Enhance action of antithrombin • Heparin • unfractionated UFH • low molecular weight LMWH
Heparin • Discovered in 1916 • Utilised when there is need for rapid anticoagulant effect • Prevention of VTE and treatment of DVT and PE • Early treatment of unstable angina and MI • Cardiac surgery, bypass, vascular surgery, and coronary angioplasty • Selected patients with disseminated intravascular coagulation • Heparin and Low-Molecular-Weight Heparin, Mechanisms of Action, Pharmacokinetics,Dosing, Monitoring, Efficacy, and Safety Hirsh J et al CHEST 2001; 119:64S–94S
Low Molecular Weight Heparin • Prevention of VTE and treatment of DVT and PE • Early treatment of unstable angina and MI
Heparin: mechanism of action • Mechanism is mediated through antithrombin in the coagulation cascade • Inhibits platelet function
Coagulation pathway Heparin Antithrombin 1000X
Unfractionated heparin • Continuous IV route • Low molecular weight heparin • SC route • enoxaparin (Clexane) • tinzaparin (Innohep)
Heparin and bleeding The risk of heparin-associated bleeding increases with Dose Concomitant thrombolytic therapy or other drugs Recent surgery Trauma Invasive procedures Concomitant haemostatic defects
Heparin and bleeding • Reversal of heparin • Stop treatment (Half life = 90 minutes) • Protamine Sulphate
Osteopoenia Heparin Induced Thrombocytopoenia Limitations of heparin
Monitoring heparin therapy • Relationship between heparin dose, efficacy and safety • Need for laboratory monitoring • APTT (Unfractionated heparin) • Anti Xa assay (Low molecular weight heparin)
APTT • Activated Partial Thromboplastin Time • APTT ratio calculated from the APTT • Sensitive to factor VIII IX XI XII • Normal range variations • APTT: • Measures the clotting time of plasma after the activation of the coagulation cascade with Silica.
Coagulation pathway APTT Heparin Antithrombin 1000X
Direct Thrombin Inhibitors (DTI) • Dabigatran • Inhibits thrombin directly, no cofactor required as in heparin • Predictable anticoagulant response • Dabigatran etexilate, oral prodrug that is converted to dabigatran
Dabigatran • Rapid onset of action • Lack of interaction with food and drugs • No need for routine monitoring • Broad therapeutic window • Fixed dose administration • Renal excretion