reversal of oral anticoagulant therapy
Last reviewed 01/2018
Seek expert advice.
An algorithm for the management of bleeding and excessive anticoagulation was devised (3):
- if 3.0 < INR < 6.0 (target INR 2.5) then:
- reduce warfarin dose/stop warfarin
- restart warfarin when INR < 5.0
- if 4.0 < INR < 6.0 (target INR 3.5)
- reduce warfarin/stop warfarin
- restart warfarin when INR < 5.0
- if 6.0 < INR < 8.0 and no bleeding or minor bleeding then:
- stop warfarin
- restart when INR < 5.0
- if INR > 8.0 and no bleeding or minor bleeding then:
- stop warfarin
- restart warfarin when INR < 5.0
- if other risk factors for bleeding then give 0.5-2.5mg of oral vitamin
K
- if major bleeding then:
- stop warfarin
- managing bleeding and excessive anticoagulation
- reversal of anticoagulation with vitamin K is achieved more rapidly with intravenous administration than oral administration
- in the original guideline an option of 5 mg of vitamin K orally
or intravenously was recommended for patients with major bleeding
(1), in addition to factor replacement therapy with either a factor
concentrate or fresh frozen plasma (FFP). Subsequent guidance (5)
now considers that, in patients with major bleeding, reversal with
intravenous vitamin K is preferable. A dose of either 5 or 10 mg is
recommended.
- complete and rapid reversal of over-anticoagulation is more readily achieved with a factor concentrate than with FFP
- intravenous vitamin K should be given if reversal is to be sustained
- the guidance recommends (5,6)
- reversal of anticoagulation in patients with major bleeding requires administration of a factor concentrate (prothrombin factor concentrate) in preference to FFP, when this is available and administration of intravenous rather than oral vitamin K
Unexpected bleeding at therapeutic levels:
- investigate for possible cause e.g. alimentary or renal disease
Notes:
- there is evidence that in patients receiving warfarin and who had an INR
between 4.5 and 10.0, low dose vitamin K lowered the INR to between 1.8 and
3.2 the day after administration (2)
- however a more recent large randomized controlled trail including more than 700 patients with INR values between 4.5 and 10.0 failed to show a statistically significant reduction in major bleeding events in the group of patients randomized to 1.25 mg of oral vitamin K compared with the group of patients randomized to placebo (3)
Reference:
- Guidelines on oral anticoagulation: third edition . British Journal of Haematology 1998;101 (2): 374-387
- Crowther MA et al. Treatment of warfarin-associated coagulopathy with oral vitamin K: a randomised controlled trial. Lancet 2000; 356: 1551-3.
- Crowther MA, Ageno W, Garcia D, et al. Effectiveness of low dose oral vitamin K for patients with elevated INR values: results of randomized trial examining clinical outcomes. J Thromb Haemost 2007;5 Suppl 2:P-S-219
- MeReC Bulletin (1997); 8(1): 1-4.
- Guidelines on oral anticoagulation (warfarin): third edition - 2005 update. British Journal of Haematol 2006; 132(3): 277-85
- NICE (November 2015). Blood transfusion