Title: MANAGEMENT OF HEMORRHAGE IN PATIENTS WITH MECHANICAL HEART VALVES
1MANAGEMENT OF HEMORRHAGE IN PATIENTS WITH
MECHANICAL HEART VALVES
2Clinical Scenario
- Mr. H.R. is a 62 y.o. white male with PMHx. of
CAD and Aortic Stenosis. He underwent 3 vessel
CABG and AVR with St. Jude Valve approximately 4
years ago. Admitted for elective knee
arthroscopy and Heparin Window. 48 hours
post-op developed acute drop in Hgb and left
flank pain. Abdominal CT revealed large left
retroperitoneal hematoma.
3CLINICAL QUESTIONS
- What is the risk of temporarily interrupting
anticoagulation in a patient with a mechanical
heart valve? - How long should anticoagulation be held in
patients with bleeding and mechanical heart
valves?
4INTRODUCTION
- In March 1960, the first successful replacement
of an aortic valve was performed by Harkin. - Approximately 60,000 valve repairs are performed
annually in the U.S. - More than 80 models of prosthetic heart valves
have been developed since the 1950s.
5TYPES OF PROSTHETIC VALVES
- Prosthetic heart valves may be mechanical or
bioprosthetic. - Mechanical valves are very durable, most lasting
at least 20 to 30 years. - 10 to 20 percent of homograft bioprostheses and
30 percent of heterograft bioprostheses fail with
10 to 15 years of implantation.
6TYPES OF PROSTHETIC HEART VALVES
- MECHANICAL
- Caged-ball
Starr-Edwards - Single-tilting-disk
Bjork-Shiley -
Medtronic-Hall -
Omnicarbon - Bileaflet-tilting-disk St. Jude
Medical -
Carbomedics -
Edwards-Duromedics - BIOPROSTHESIS
- Heterograft Hancock
-
Carpentier-Edwards - Homograft
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8INCIDENCE RATES OF VALVE THROMBOSIS AND MAJOR
AND TOTAL EMBOLISMS
- Incidence Rates per 100
Patient-Years - Anticoagulation Valve Thrombosis Major
Emb. Total Emb. - NONE 1.8 (0.9-3.0)
4.0(2.9-5.2) 8.6 (7-10.4) - Antiplatelet 1.6 (1-2.5)
2.2(1.4-3.1) 8.2(6.6-10) - Coumadin 0.2(0.2-0.2)
1.0(1.0-1.1) 1.8(1.7-1.9) - Coumadin AP 0.1(0-0.3)
1.7(1.1-2.3) 3.2(2.4-4.1) - Major embolism defined as causing death, residual
neurologic deficit, or peripheral ischemia
requiring surgery.
9RISK FACTORS FOR EMBOLIZATION
- Mitral valve prosthesis
- Multiple prosthetic valves
- Caged-ball valves
- Prior CVA
- Atrial Fibrillation
- Age greater than 70
- Depressed left ventricular function
10DAILY RISK OF WITHOLDING ANTICOAGULATION
- Without anticoagulation, the risk of major
embolism is 4 per 100 patient-years and the risk
of thrombosis is 1.7 per 100 patient-years. - The yearly risk of an event would be 5.7.
However, the risk for 1 day would only be
(41.7)/365 0.016.
11STUDIES WHICH SUBSTANTIATE A LOW DAILY RISK
- Very limited data available on the risk of
thromboembolism following discontinuation of
warfarin because of bleeding. - Previous studies have focused on the interruption
of warfarin prior to non-cardiac surgery. - Available data is limited to case reports and
small case series
12Intra-cranial Hemorrhage
- Gomez et al., reported a case of hypertensive
cerebral hemorrhage in a patient on warfarin for
a Bjork-Shiley aortic valve. Warfarin was
re-instituted after 10 days without further
bleeding or thromboembolic phenomenon. - Babikian et al., reported a series of six
patients hospitalized with intra-cerebral bleed.
Five patients survived initial event. Warfarin
therapy was withheld a mean of 19 days without
any thromboembolic events during the 6 months of
follow up.
13Ananthasubramaniam et al How Safely and for How
Long Can Warfarin Therapy Be Withheld in
Prosthetic Heart Valve Patients Hospitilized With
a Major Hemorrhage?
- Design - Retrospective medical record review
- Methods - Retrospective review of 28 patients
with prosthetic heart valves who were
hospitalized with a major hemorrhage in the Henry
Ford Hospital from 1990 to 1997.
14PATIENT POPULATION
- Demographics
- 28 patients included
- Mean age 61 11 years
- 15 men and 13 women
- 35 with atrial fibrillation
- 32 with prior CVA
- 39 with LV dysfunction
- Primary Diagnosis
- 25 patients (89) with GI Hemorrhage
- 2 patients with intra-cerebral hemorrhage
- 1 patient with subdural hematoma
15VALVE POSITION AND TYPE
- TYPE
- 32 valves were present in 28 patients.
- 24 St. Jude valves
- 2 Bjork-Shiley valves
- 2 Starr-Edwards valves
- 4 Carpentier-Edward bioprosthetic valves.
- POSITION
- 12 patients with valves in mitral position.
- 12 patients with valves in the aortic position.
- 4 patients with combined mitral and aortic valves.
16ANTICOAGULATION STATUS AT ADMISSION
- 16 patients (57) with within therapeutic range.
- 7 patients (25) within the sub-therapeutic
range. - 5 patients (18) with supratherapeutic
anticoagulation.
17REVERSAL OF ANTICOAGULATION
- Five of the 28 patients (17) received no
specific treatment for correction of INR/PT. - 7 patients (30) received FFP.
- 5 patients (21) received Vitamin K.
- 16 patients (69) received PRBCs.
18SUMMARY OF IN-HOSPITAL COURSE
- Mean duration of warfarin withholding was 15 4
days. Seven patients (25) had warfarin withheld
for 1 to 7 days, 13 patients (46) for 7 to 21
days, and 8 patients (28) for gt 3weeks. - Four in-hospital deaths felt due to complications
of initial hemorrhage. - NO THROMBOEMBOLIC EVENTS DURING HOSPITILIZATION.
19DISCHARGE ANTICOAGULATION
- Twenty-two of the 24 patients were restarted on
warfarin therapy and had reached an INR gt 2.0 at
the time of discharge. - Both patients discharged without warfarin therapy
had a history of recurrent bleeding episodes. - One patient with a St. Jude Aortic Valve was
discharged on ASA. - The other patient with a St. Jude mitral valve
was discharged without any anticoagulation.
20SIX MONTH FOLLOW UP
- 21 of the 24 patients were available for follow
up (all three patients had been restarted on
warfarin prior to discharge). - In the 19 patients who were discharged on
warfarin and available for follow up, there were
no clinically recognized thromboembolic events. - The patient discharged without anticoagulation
died suddenly at home 4 months after discharge,
and no autopsy was performed. - The patient discharged on ASA had no
thromboembolic events. - 10 patients receiving warfarin had recurrent GI
bleeding but only 2 had to be hospitalized.
21CONCLUSIONS
- At six months, there were no thromboembolic
events in hospitalized patients with
anticoagulation withheld for a mean of 15 4
days. - This suggests that warfarin may be withheld from
14 to 21 days with a low risk of thromboembolism. - Over half of the patients with GI bleeding had a
recurrence within 6 months.
22LIMITATIONS
- Small study population and three of the patients
discharged on warfarin were lost to follow up. - The thromboembolic risk may be underestimated ,
since the majority of the patients had St. Jude
valves and single prosthesis.
23CLINICAL APPLICATION
- Daily risk of thromboembolic events in patients
with prosthetic valves unable to tolerate
anticoagulation is low (0.016). - Limited data seems to agree that the risk of
discontinuation of therapy is low. - The source of bleeding should be aggressively
evaluated and treated. - Above all, physicians must balance the risk of
bleeding vs. the benefits of anticoagulation.
24H.R.s HOSPITAL COURSE
- Heparin drip was discontinued.
- Patients HGB stabilized with 2 U PRBC.
- Patient scheduled to follow up with PCP at 2
weeks from stabilization of HGB for CBC and
evaluation. - If stable, he will resume prior dose of coumadin
with goal INR b/t 2.5-3.5.