TY - JOUR
T1 - Anticoagulant Reversal Strategies in the Emergency Department Setting
T2 - Recommendations of a Multidisciplinary Expert Panel
AU - Baugh, Christopher W.
AU - Levine, Michael
AU - Cornutt, David
AU - Wilson, Jason W.
AU - Kwun, Richard
AU - Mahan, Charles E.
AU - Pollack, Charles V.
AU - Marcolini, Evie G.
AU - Milling, Truman J.
AU - Peacock, W. Frank
AU - Rosovsky, Rachel P.
AU - Wu, Fred
AU - Sarode, Ravi
AU - Spyropoulos, Alex C.
AU - Villines, Todd C.
AU - Woods, Timothy D.
AU - McManus, John
AU - Williams, James
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2019 American College of Emergency Physicians
PY - 2020/10
Y1 - 2020/10
N2 - Bleeding is the most common complication of anticoagulant use. The evaluation and management of the bleeding patient is a core competency of emergency medicine. As the prevalence of patients receiving anticoagulant agents and variety of anticoagulants with different mechanisms of action, pharmacokinetics, indications, and corresponding reversal agents increase, physicians and other clinicians working in the emergency department require a current and nuanced understanding of how best to assess, treat, and reverse anticoagulated patients. In this project, we convened an expert panel to create a consensus decision tree and framework for assessment of the bleeding patient receiving an anticoagulant, as well as use of anticoagulant reversal or coagulation factor replacement, and to address controversies and gaps relevant to this topic. To support decision tree interpretation, the panel also reached agreement on key definitions of life-threatening bleeding, bleeding at a critical site, and emergency surgery or urgent invasive procedure. To reach consensus recommendations, we used a structured literature review and a modified Delphi technique by an expert panel of academic and community physicians with training in emergency medicine, cardiology, hematology, internal medicine/thrombology, pharmacology, toxicology, transfusion medicine and hemostasis, neurology, and surgery, and by other key stakeholder groups.
AB - Bleeding is the most common complication of anticoagulant use. The evaluation and management of the bleeding patient is a core competency of emergency medicine. As the prevalence of patients receiving anticoagulant agents and variety of anticoagulants with different mechanisms of action, pharmacokinetics, indications, and corresponding reversal agents increase, physicians and other clinicians working in the emergency department require a current and nuanced understanding of how best to assess, treat, and reverse anticoagulated patients. In this project, we convened an expert panel to create a consensus decision tree and framework for assessment of the bleeding patient receiving an anticoagulant, as well as use of anticoagulant reversal or coagulation factor replacement, and to address controversies and gaps relevant to this topic. To support decision tree interpretation, the panel also reached agreement on key definitions of life-threatening bleeding, bleeding at a critical site, and emergency surgery or urgent invasive procedure. To reach consensus recommendations, we used a structured literature review and a modified Delphi technique by an expert panel of academic and community physicians with training in emergency medicine, cardiology, hematology, internal medicine/thrombology, pharmacology, toxicology, transfusion medicine and hemostasis, neurology, and surgery, and by other key stakeholder groups.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85075346379&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.annemergmed.2019.09.001
DO - 10.1016/j.annemergmed.2019.09.001
M3 - Article
C2 - 31732375
AN - SCOPUS:85075346379
SN - 0196-0644
VL - 76
SP - 470
EP - 485
JO - Annals of Emergency Medicine
JF - Annals of Emergency Medicine
IS - 4
ER -