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Anti-coagulants Principles and practice Gary Greenberg, MD, MPH Open Door Clinic Urban Ministries of Wake Co. NC Assoc. Free Clinics May, 2011 1 Disclaimer / Alerts • I’m an internist at Urban Ministries Wake Co, and once-upon-a-time, a faculty practitioner at Duke Med. Ctr. x 18 years • Only I am responsible for recommendations, and your mileage may vary • Topics do include off-label and non-guideline-based care. • Talk stresses new ideas, so potential truth-flux • I have no conflicts of interest to disclose. 2 Aims & Limitations • Mechanisms (briefly) • Clinical, evidence-based, logistical, tactical • Website: tinyurl.com/AntiCoag or www.OpenDoorDocs.org/AntiCoag.html Documents References Calculators Tools 3 Platelet Activation Blockers • Clinical use is for arterial effects, preventing “white” emboli, arising across rapid flow • Stroke prevention, not venous thrombosis prevention (or treatment) • Effect can be irreversible for the individual platelet (aspirin) or dose-related (others) 4 Platelet Activation Blockers Useful / Common Narrow use, show-off list • Aspirin • • • • High (325 mg) v low (81 mg) dose • • • • • Clopidogril (Plavix®) Ticlopidine (Ticlid®) Prasugrel (Effient®) Cilostazol (Pletal®) Aggrenox® (combines aspirin Tirofiban (Aggrastat®) Dipyridamole (Persantine®) Anagrelide (Agrylin®) Eptifibatide (Integrilin®, IV only) with dipyridamole) 5 Uses for platelet aggregation antagonists • CNS / embolic protection Threatened stroke / TIA Post-stroke secondary prevention Atrial fibrillation • Coronary, direct thrombosis protection Interrupt an MI Post MI Post coronary re-vascularization (esp. stent placement) High vascular risk status (DM+ or P.A.D.) Primary prevention 6 Pharmacology Drug Class Evidencebased Uses Comment Interactions Aspirin Cyclo-oxygenase inhibitor (COX-I) Native CAD Stent protection CVA PAD Permanently acetylates cyclooxygenase prostaglandin synthetase Action blocked by nonacetylated salicylates (maybe Pepto), maybe ibuprofen, but not naproxen Plavix® Clopidogril ADP receptor P2Y12 inhibitor Stent protection CVA PAD (for CAD/CVA risk) Ticlid® Ticlopidine ADP receptor P2Y12 inhibitor Stent protection Prasugrel Effient® ADP receptor P2Y12 inhibitor Stent protection Dipyridamole Thromboxane inhibitor CVA PAD (direct effect) (in Aggrenox® and Persantine®) Metabolic activation blocked by proton-pump inhibitors (except pantoprazole = Protonix) No effect in aggregated clinical trials First platelet agent to show effectiveness in women No interaction with PPI’s Also vasodilator, used for ‘stress’ coronary testing 7 Aspirin • Cheap, well accepted • “Children’s aspirin” 81 is never for children! Aspirinita • Duration of effect is life of platelet • Direct gastric irritant may make it riskier • Relative efficacy/ safety for 325 v 81 is unclear, maybe even paradoxical • Ibuprofen, other salicylates may block effect 8 Plavix® Clopidogril • 75 mg daily = $170 / month • Required for stents, especially drug-eluting stents, for at least a year • Demonstrable reduction in CVA & MI for patients with PAD (as seen on TV) • Altered activation with co-administration of • No generic (now). But: both previous & soon (November, 2011) • Pt-Assistance requires Social Security Number (but BristolMyers Squibb/Sanofi website says only: “Must live in the U.S.” 9 Ticlopidine (used to be Ticlid®) • • • • 250 mg BID = $80 / month Earliest aspirin replacement, now only generic Proven efficacy for stent protection In addition to TTP & hemorrhage Bone marrow effects include aplastic anemia Requires q 2 week CBC monitoring for prompt discontinuation, for at least 3 months Needs informed consent regarding unique risks and additional lab responsibilities 10 Effient® Prasugrel • • • • 10 mg daily = $187 / mo New competitor to Plavix® Equally effective for stent protection Patient Assistance Program seems not to require SSN (“must be a US resident”) • No evidence for CAD or CVA prophylaxis in PAD pts • May be sampling, since a new agent • No salicylate or ibuprofen or PPI interactions 11 Aggrenox® • Combination capsule: i BID = $200 / mo Aspirin 25 mg, Dipyridamole 200 mg, • Demonstrably effective CVA prevention (esp. used for patients who stroked while on ASA) • Pkg: “not interchangeable” with separate ingredients Combination is brand-name only Generic dipyridamole comes in 75 mg tab, so “replacement” is iii BID, #180/mo = $155 12 Pharmacology Drug Class Evidencebased Uses Comment Interactions Aspirin Cyclo-oxygenase inhibitor (COX-I) Native CAD Stent protection CVA PAD Permanently acetylates cyclooxygenase prostaglandin synthetase Action blocked by nonacetylated salicylates (maybe Pepto), maybe ibuprofen, but not naproxen Plavix® Clopidogril ADP receptor P2Y12 inhibitor Stent protection CVA PAD (for CAD/CVA risk) Ticlid® Ticlopidine ADP receptor P2Y12 inhibitor Stent protection Prasugrel Effient® ADP receptor P2Y12 inhibitor Stent protection Dipyridamole Thromboxane inhibitor CVA PAD (direct effect) (in Aggrenox® and Persantine®) Metabolic activation blocked by proton-pump inhibitors (except pantoprazole = Protonix) No effect in aggregated clinical trials First platelet agent to show effectiveness in women No interaction with PPI’s Also vasodilator, used for ‘stress’ coronary testing 13 Atrial Fibrillation • Effects Embolic stroke is main risk Congestive failure (“10%” of cardiac output) Syncope Palpitations • Treatment to rate or correction of rhythm seems nearly equally effective (or ineffective) • Intermittent is not necessarily safer than continuous 14 Anticoagulation Decision CHADS-2 Criterion Score History of Congestive Heart Failure 1 History of Hypertension 1 Age over 75 y/o 1 History of Diabetes 1 Stroke or TIA history 2 Score Risk / year 1 2.8% 2 4.0% Risk for embolic event, if no treatment: 3 5.9% 1-2: aspirin, 3+ consider ‘full’ anticoagulation 4 8.5% 5 12.5 6 18.2% Total Chest. 2008 Jun;133(6 Suppl):546S-592S. Antithrombotic therapy in atrial fibrillation: American College of Chest Physicians Evidence-Based Clinical Practice Guidelines (8th Edition). http://www.vhpharmsci.com/sparc/ 15 Anticoagulation Decision CHA2DS2-VASc Criterion Score History of Congestive Heart Failure 1 History of Hypertension 1 Age over 75 y/o 2* Age 65-74 y/o * Score Risk / year 1* 1 1.5% History of Diabetes 1 2 3.0% Stroke or TIA history 2 3 4.4% Vascular Dx (MI, aortic placque, PAD) * 1 Female * 1 4 6.7% 5 10.5% 6 12.9% 7 13.9% 8 14.1% 9 16.1% Risk for embolic event, if no treatment: Total 1-2: aspirin, 3+ consider ‘full’ anticoagulation Chest. 2010 Feb;137(2):263-72. Refining clinical risk stratification for predicting stroke and thromboembolism in atrial fibrillation using a novel risk factor-based approach: the euro heart survey on atrial fibrillation. http://www.vhpharmsci.com/sparc/ 16 Warfarin Issues • Myths about “thinning”, so I say “clot-blocking” Tired, cold-sensitive, pale, low-flow • Delayed onset is not pharmacological “loading”, it’s earlier Factor VII wearing out • Evening dosing allows more rapid dose adjustment • Medical Mutual of NC provides an informed consent contract and a tracking flow-sheet • Every patient needs to have a phone, good literacy (or designate someone to supervise both medication use and communication) • 7-day pill organizers help 17 Warfarin Issues Drug interactions include many mechanisms • Metabolic breakdown of warfarin (EtOH, macrolides, St. John’s wort) • Enteral kinetics for vitamin K (antibiotics) • Protein binding for warfarin (salsalate) • Increased risk for GI irritation (NSAIDs, EtOH) • Platelet inhibition (NSAIDs) Dietary issues are about vitamin K • Outrageous fear, where education is for total avoidance 18 About Vitamin K • 1st reported in German as Koagulationsvitamin • Necessary for manufacture of hepatic-sourced clotting factors. Longest-lived of these is VII • Sources are vegetables (green, leafy) spinach, broccoli, but also onions, spices • Patients learn to fear these, resulting in occasional intake with increased variability 19 SUPPLEMENTING Vitamin K?! • Patient’s dietary variability is reduced in proportionate impact • Warfarin dose will need to be increased to measurable effect • Patients need to understand that skipping or stopping the vitamin pill predictably causes dangerous warfarin overdose • To synchronize compliance, needs to be taken together • CostCo “Premium” multivitamins have 100% RDA (80 microgram daily). Studies used 100, 150, 200 μg • Patients need to understand that this is NOT a common clinical practice Vitamin K supplementation can improve stability of anticoagulation for patients with unexplained variability in response to warfarin Blood, 2007 109:2419-2423 Vitamin K1 supplementation to improve the stability of anticoagulation therapy with vitamin K antagonists: a dose-finding study Haematologica, 2011 96: 583-589 20 Modified Warfarin Tracking Page Located at TinyUrl/AntiCoag 21 Warfarin Dose Calculations • Use proportionate intervals (small steps for small doses, bigger steps for larger ones) • Use just one pill-size • Smoothe the regimen across the week • Patient reads back their regimen • Calculator and tracking form and contract are all at tinyurl.com/AntiCoag 22 Warfarin Dose Adjustment Calculator Located at TinyUrl/AntiCoag 23 Patient Take-Home Worksheet Located at TinyUrl/AntiCoag 24 Duration of Therapy • Atrial Fibrillation, until need to stop • Pulmonary emboli or venous thrombosis (VTE) Single episode, Reversible cause: at least 3-6 months Injury, immobility, pregnancy, medication (BCP’s), hospitalization Recurrent VTE: at least 12 months Idiopathic: unknown, perhaps 12 months Both recurrent and idiopathic (or irreversible): indefinite 25 Intensity of Therapy Usual case, INR 2.0 – 3.0 • Venous thromboembolism • Atrial Fibrillation High intensity, INR 2.5 – 3.5 • Mechanical prosthetic valve Low intensity (soft recommendation), INR 1.5 – 2.0 • High risk patient, recurrent VTE 26 Other options: Enoxaparin (Lovenox®) Advantages Disadvantages • Compared to heparin drip • Injectable, local bruising • Cost: Out-patient Intermittent, calculated dose Rarer platelet antibodies No monitoring 100 mg BID, $3,400/mo 60 mg BID, $2,050/mo But: Pt Assistance available • Compared to warfarin Instantly on, quickly gone No monitoring Predictable dose More effective in cancer pts 27 Other options: Vena Cava Filter (“umbrella”) • Only for prevention of pulmonary emboli, not for cardiac valves or atrial fibrillation Patients still have clots in their legs, with pain, edema • Effective immediately, but invasively • Need to discuss if permanent is desired, many are permanent (or require open, surgical removal) • Allows discontinuation of anticoagulation during GI bleed or stroke urgency 28 Other options: Dabigaltran Pradaxa® • Direct thrombin inhibitor, licensed 10/20/10 • Effective in 12 hours • No monitoring, no dose-calculation, no injection, no dietary issues, (almost) no interactions • Only licensed for Atrial Fibrillation, but published articles show advantages for venous thromboembolism, too • Usual dose: 150 BID, $220/mo (renal dose reduction) • Patient assistance is available 29 Other options: Rivaroxaban (soon more?) • Direct thrombin (factor Xa) inhibitor • Derived from 2 Mexican leach anticoagulants • New class of agent, several collectively called “xabans” (get it?) • Daily flat oral dosing, without monitoring, dietary effects, many drug interactions (except statins via cytochrome CYP3A4) 30 References Online sites • ePocrates.com • DestinationRx.com • NeedyMeds.com • DailyMed.nlm.nih.gov • Guidelines.gov Peer-reviewed Publications (avail online) • Mgmt of VTE: A Clinical Practice Guideline from Amer. Coll. of Physicians & Amer. Acad. of Fam. Physicians (2007) Ann Intern Med 2007 146:204-210 • New Anticoagulants and the Future of Cardiology Rev Esp Cardiol. 2010; 63 :1223-9 31 I’m not just a speaker / doctor… Just like Cy Sperling, President of the “Hair Club for Men” (& a member) (no endorsement intended) My personal medical history Remote ankle surgery, mild permanent venous insufficiency Ipsilateral distal DVT, 20 yrs later Pulmonary embolus 2 years later Negative thrombophilia evaluation, now (+) Family History spont DVT Lifelong “full” anticoagulation 32