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Management of bleeding

Management of bleeding. Andrew McDonald Alberts Cellular Therapy. “All bleeding eventually stops”. n. Modified Virchow’s triad. Blood flow Size BP. BLEEDING. Coagulation Platelets Clotting factors Fibrinolytic system. Vessel wall Endothelial activation Collagen disorders Age

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Management of bleeding

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  1. Management of bleeding Andrew McDonald Alberts Cellular Therapy “All bleeding eventually stops”

  2. n Modified Virchow’s triad Blood flow Size BP BLEEDING Coagulation Platelets Clotting factors Fibrinolytic system Vessel wall Endothelial activation Collagen disorders Age Corticosteroids

  3. n • n

  4. n

  5. n Thrombin generation LOW [Thrombin] • VIII activation and release from vWF • V activation and release from platelets • Platelet activation • XI activation HIGH [Thrombin] • Fibrin formation • TAFI activation • XIII activation • Protein C activation (with thrombomodulin)

  6. n Categories of patients • n • Known “bleeders” • Anticoagulants or anti-platelet agents • Other drugs • Starch vol expanders, cephalosporins • Inherited • Acquired • ITP • Inhibitors • Cirrhosis • Uraemia • Unknown • With bleeding history • Unexpected bleed • Type of bleed: • ACUTE vs CHRONIC • Minor • Major • Admission required •  2 units RBC • Critical organ • Life threatening • ICH • Massive GIT • Airway

  7. n Nutrition and bleeding risk • n

  8. n Strategies for stopping bleeding Make a better clot Hold on to clot Make a better clot in the first place Tranexamic acid Drug • DDAVP • Oestrogen • Factor 8 concentrate • Activated rVIIa (Novoseven) • PCC (plasma derived – Haemosolvex) • Fibrin glue Transfusion • FFP • Platelets • Cryoprecipitate • [RBC]

  9. Clotting factors

  10. n • n

  11. n Anti-fibrinolytic agents • Tranexamic acid –synthetic lysine analogue • Blocks lysine binding site on plasminogen, preventing activation to plasmin • Oral / mouthwash / IV • Typical dose 1-1.5G 6-8 hourly (range dose 2.5-100mg/kg) • Useful in: • Menorrhagia • Dental extractions • Major surgery – orthopaedic, cardiac, urologic • Bleeding associated with • Mild Haemophilia A and VWD • Platelet disorders • Risk of thrombosis low

  12. n DDAVP • Modified analogue of ADH (AVP) • IV formulation (dose 0.3ug/kg/day) • NB tachyphylaxis (25% less effective on day 2) • Oral tabs and low dose nasal spray not effective for haemorrhage • Increases endogenous factor 8 and VWF levels (via V2 receptor) • Useful in mild Haemophilia A and Type 1 VWD • Also useful in platelet derived bleeding • Mild inherited cytopathies • Antiplatelet agents • Mild/mod thrombocytopenia • Contraindicated in known coronary artery disease • Side effect – headache, flushing, hyponatraemia

  13. 100 90 80 70 60 Placebo (N=59) Percent of patients (%) 50 NovoSeven® (N=52) 40 P= 0.019 30 20 10 0 ≥ 8 0 5 10 15 20 25 30 35 40 45 50 RBC units within 48 hours rhVIIa (Novoseven) • Registered for bleeding in haemophilia with inhibitors • Used as a general haemostatic in severe life threatening bleeding • Massive trauma • Massive APH / PPH • Cardiac surgery • ICH • Expensive – reimbursement issues • Increased thrombotic events (OR 1.6) • Dose 90ug/kg; not effective in severe acidosis, hypothermia, and low platelets Boffard KD et al. J Trauma 2005;59(1):8-18

  14. n Reversal of anticoagulation • All anticoagulants increase bleeding risk • Scoring systems to predict, but bleeding often unpredictable • HAS-BLED score • Hypertension,abnormal kidney/liver, Stroke, Bleeding history, labile INR, Elderly (>65), Drugs/alcohol Risk of bleed OLD NEW Difficulty in reversal

  15. n Reversal of anticoagulation Warfarin: Withhold warfarin only: • 2 older case series total 299 pts, with 352 INR values >6 • 2 pts (0.6%) suffered haemorrhage Glover et al 1995 Lousberg et al 1998 • 1104 pts with INR >5 • 30 day incidence of major bleeds low at 1.3% • Subanalysis of 42 pts (4.3%) with INR >9 - incidence major bleeds 9.6% (4pts) - more likely to receive Vitamin K (62% vs 7%) Garcia et al 2006

  16. n Reversal of anticoagulation Warfarin: Withhold wafarinand give Vit K: • IV VitK - 2 small studies • 31 pts (10 received 1mg, 21 received 0.5mg IV) • 50% pts with 1mg INR @24h <2, • all ptswith 0.5mg between INR 2 - 5.5 @24h Shetty et al 1992 • Anaphylaxis est. 3 / 10 000 administrations • Oral Vit K 1 – 2.5 mg safe and no risk of warfarin resistance • 7 small studies: less bleeding with Vit K use and more rapid control • 59 pts with mechanical heart valve with INR 6 - 12 • 13/29 vs 4/30 with INR in range @24h with Vit K 1mg vs placebo • 3/29 (10%) with INR <1.8 @24h with Vit K Ageno et al 2005 ORAL > IV > Subcut

  17. n Reversal of anticoagulation Warfarin: Urgent reversal • CNS or vital organ haemorrhage • Major bleed (requiring admission, transfusion RBC) • Uncertainty of variable vs fixed dose PCC - Haemosolvex

  18. n Reversal of anticoagulation • UFH • Short T1/2 – expectant management possible • Reversal with protamine sulphate 1mg/100IU IV • Max 50mg in 10 min • LMWH • Longer T1/2, but more predictable, less bleeding • Prolonged effect in renal dysfunction • Protamine sulphate 50-70% effective • Dose as above or 0.5-1mg/mg enoxaparin • Fondaparinux • Long T1/2 of 20 hours, longer in renal failure • Protamine not effective • Novoseven ???

  19. n Reversal of anticoagulation Dabigetran Rivaroxaban • Anti –Xa • Dose 10mg daily • Tmax 2.5-4h • T1/2 5-9h, 9-13h (elderly) • Daily dose • 66% faecal, 33% renal • PCC / VIIA / FEIBA for bleeding • Assay: anti-Xa • Drug interaction CYP3A4 • Anti-thrombin • Dose 150-200mg • Tmax 2h • T1/2 14-17 h • Daily or BD dose • 80% renal, 20% fecal • No current antidote • Possible dialysis • Assay: Ecarin clotting time • PPI decrease absorption

  20. n Reversal of anti-platelet agents

  21. n SUMMARY • Chronic bleeding • Lab tests – make a diagnosis • Acute bleed with anticoagulants • Reverse as per guidelines • Acute bleed – unexpected • TEG and lab • Tranexamic acid/DDAVP/FFP

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