Acute subdural hematoma in patients on oral anticoagulant therapy: management and outcome

被引:40
作者
Won, Sae-Yeon [1 ]
Dubinski, Daniel [1 ]
Bruder, Markus [1 ]
Cattani, Adriano [1 ]
Seifert, Volker [1 ]
Konczalla, Juergen [1 ]
机构
[1] Goethe Univ, Univ Hosp, Dept Neurosurg, Frankfurt, Germany
关键词
acute subdural hematoma; anticoagulation; direct oral anticoagulant; DOACs; outcome; management; RANDOMIZED CONTROLLED-TRIALS; INTRACEREBRAL HEMORRHAGE; ANDEXANET ALPHA; INTRACRANIAL HEMORRHAGE; REVERSAL; WARFARIN; DABIGATRAN; ANTIPLATELET; METAANALYSIS; AGENTS;
D O I
10.3171/2017.8.FOCUS17421
中图分类号
R74 [神经病学与精神病学];
学科分类号
摘要
OBJECTIVE Isolated acute subdural hematoma (aSDH) is increasing in older populations and so is the use of oral anticoagulant therapy (OAT). The dramatic increase of OAT-with direct oral anticoagulants (DOACs) as well as with conventional anticoagulants-is leading to changes in the care of patients who present with aSDH while receiving OAT. The purpose of this study was to determine the management and outcome of patients being treated with OAT at the time of aSDH presentation. METHODS In this single-center, retrospective study, the authors analyzed 116 consecutive cases involving patients with aSDH treated from January 2007 to June 2016. The following parameters were assessed: patient characteristics, admission status, anticoagulation status, perioperative management, comorbidities, clinical course, and outcome as determined at discharge and through 6 months of follow-up. Oral anticoagulants were classified as thrombocyte inhibitors, vitamin K antagonists, and DOACs. Patients were stratified based on which type of medication they were taking, and subgroup analyses were performed. Predictors of unfavorable outcome at discharge and follow-up were identified. RESULTS Of 116 patients, 74 (64%) had been following an OAT regimen at presentation with aSDH. The patients who were taking oral anticoagulants (OAT group) were significantly older (OR 12.5), more often comatose 24 hours postoperatively (OR 2.4), and more often had >= 4 comorbidities (OR 3.2) than patients who were not taking oral anticoagulants (no-OAT group). Accordingly, the rate of unfavorable outcome was significantly higher in patients in the OAT group, both at discharge (OR 2.3) and at follow-up (OR 2.2). Of the patients in the OAT group, 37.8% were taking a thrombocyte inhibitor, 54.1% a vitamin K antagonist, and 8.1% DOACs. In all cases, OAT was stopped on discovery of aSDH. For reversal of anticoagulation, patients who were taking a thrombocyte inhibitor received desmopressin 0.4 mu g/kg, 1-2 g tranexamic acid, and preoperative transfusion with 2 units of platelets. Patients following other oral anticoagulant regimens received 50 IU/kg of prothrombin complex concentrates and 10 mg of vitamin K. There was no significant difference in the rebleeding rate between the OAT and no-OAT groups. The in-hospital mortality rate was significantly higher for patients who were taking a thrombocyte inhibitor (OR 3.3), whereas patients who were taking a vitamin K antagonist had a significantly higher 6-month mortality rate (OR 2.7). Patients taking DOACs showed a tendency toward unfavorable outcome, with higher mortality rates than patients on conventional OAT or patients in the vitamin K antagonist subgroup. Independent predictors for unfavorable outcome at discharge were comatose status 24 hours after surgery (OR 93.2), rebleeding (OR 9.8), respiratory disease (OR 4.1), and infection (OR 11.1) (Nagelkerke R-2 = 0.684). Independent predictors for unfavorable outcome at follow-up were comatose status 24 hours after surgery (OR 12.7), rebleeding (OR 3.1), age >= 70 years (OR 3.1), and 6 or more comorbidities (OR 3.1, Nagelkerke R-2 = 0.466). OAT itself was not an independent predictor for worse outcome. CONCLUSIONS An OAT regimen at the time of presentation with aSDH is associated with increased mortality rates and unfavorable outcome at discharge and follow-up. Thrombocyte inhibitor treatment was associated with increased short-term mortality, whereas vitamin K antagonist treatment was associated with increased long-term mortality. In particular, patients on DOACs were seriously affected, showing more unfavorable outcomes at discharge as well as at follow-up. The suggested medical treatment for aSDH in both OAT and no-OAT patients seems to be effective and reasonable, with comparable rebleeding and favorable outcome rates in the 2 groups. In addition, prior OAT is not a predictor for aSDH outcome.
引用
收藏
页数:12
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Impact of discontinuation of antithrombotic therapy after surgery for chronic subdural hematoma
    Todeschi, J.
    Ferracci, F-X
    Metayer, T.
    Gouges, B.
    Leroy, H-A
    Hamdam, N.
    Bougaci, N.
    De Barros, A.
    Timofeev, A.
    Pretat, P-H
    Bannwarth, M.
    Roblot, P.
    Peltier, C.
    Lleu, M.
    Pommier, B.
    Chibbaro, S.
    Proust, F.
    Cebula, H.
    NEUROCHIRURGIE, 2020, 66 (04) : 195 - 202
  • [42] The practical management of intracerebral hemorrhage associated with oral anticoagulant therapy
    Masotti, Luca
    Di Napoli, Mario
    Godoy, Daniel A.
    Rafanelli, Daniela
    Liumbruno, Giancarlo
    Koumpouros, Nicholas
    Landini, Giancarlo
    Pampana, Alessandro
    Cappelli, Roberto
    Poli, Daniela
    Prisco, Domenico
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF STROKE, 2011, 6 (03) : 228 - 240
  • [43] Hematoma Growth in Oral Anticoagulant Related Intracerebral Hemorrhage
    Cucchiara, Brett
    Messe, Steven
    Sansing, Lauren
    Kasner, Scott
    Lyden, Patrick
    STROKE, 2008, 39 (11) : 2993 - 2996
  • [44] Hematoma growth and outcome in treated neurocritical care patients with intracerebral hemorrhage related to oral anticoagulant therapy -: Comparison of acute treatment strategies using vitamin K, fresh frozen plasma, and prothrombin complex concentrates
    Huttner, Hagen B.
    Schellinger, Peter D.
    Hartmann, Marius
    Koehrmann, Martin
    Juettler, Eric
    Wikner, Johannes
    Mueller, Stephan
    Meyding-Lamade, Uta
    Strobl, Ralf
    Mansmann, Ulrich
    Schwab, Stefan
    Steiner, Thorsten
    STROKE, 2006, 37 (06) : 1465 - 1470
  • [45] Incidence, therapy, and outcome in the management of chronic subdural hematoma in Switzerland: a population-based multicenter cohort study
    El Rahal, Amir
    Beck, Juergen
    Ahlborn, Peter
    Bernasconi, Corrado
    Marbacher, Serge
    Wanderer, Stefan
    Burkhardt, Jan-Karl
    Daniel, Roy Thomas
    Ferrari, Andrea
    Hausmann, Oliver
    Kamenova, Maria
    Kothbauer, Karl
    Lutz, Katharina
    Mariani, Luigi
    Alfieri, Alex
    Schoeni, Daniel
    Schucht, Philippe
    Raabe, Andreas
    Regli, Luca
    Kuhlen, Dominique
    Seule, Martin
    Soleman, Jehuda
    Starnoni, Daniele
    Zaldivar, Julien
    Zweifel, Christian
    Schaller, Karl
    Fung, Christian
    FRONTIERS IN NEUROLOGY, 2023, 14
  • [46] Effect of Prothrombin Complex Concentrate on Hematoma Enlargement and Clinical Outcome in Patients with Anticoagulant-Associated Intracerebral Hemorrhage
    Kuwashiro, Takahiro
    Yasaka, Masahiro
    Itabashi, Ryo
    Nakagaki, Hideaki
    Miyashita, Fumio
    Naritomi, Hiroaki
    Minematsu, Kazuo
    CEREBROVASCULAR DISEASES, 2011, 31 (02) : 170 - 176
  • [47] Acute subdural hematoma in the elderly: outcome analysis in a retrospective multicentric series of 213 patients
    Trevisi, Gianluca
    Sturiale, Carmelo Lucio
    Scerrati, Alba
    Rustemi, Oriela
    Ricciardi, Luca
    Raneri, Fabio
    Tomatis, Alberto
    Piazza, Amedeo
    Auricchio, Anna Maria
    Stifano, Vito
    Romano, Carmine
    De Bonis, Pasquale
    Mangiola, Annunziato
    NEUROSURGICAL FOCUS, 2020, 49 (04)
  • [48] Acute Spontaneous Subdural Hematoma in Posterior Fossa: Great Outcome
    Finger, Guilherme
    Martins, Otavio Garcia
    Basso, Luciano Silveira
    do Nascimento, Tobias Ludwig
    Schiavo, Felipe Lourenzon
    dos Santos, Samir Cezimbra
    Stefani, Marco Antonio
    WORLD NEUROSURGERY, 2018, 119 : 146 - 150
  • [49] Comparative study between the outcome of decompressive craniotomy versus craniectomy in the management of acute subdural hematoma
    Heba Mohamed Azouz
    Hussein Mohammed Hussein Soffar
    Waleed Abdelaal Abbass
    Ahmed El-said Ahmed
    Mohamed Tarek El-far
    Egyptian Journal of Neurosurgery, 38
  • [50] Comparative study between the outcome of decompressive craniotomy versus craniectomy in the management of acute subdural hematoma
    Azouz, Heba Mohamed
    Soffar, Hussein Mohammed Hussein
    Abbass, Waleed Abdelaal
    Ahmed, Ahmed El-said
    El-far, Mohamed Tarek
    EGYPTIAN JOURNAL OF NEUROSURGERY, 2023, 38 (01)