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TORONTO—Bridge anticoagulant therapy appears to be unnecessary in patients with atrial fibrillation (AFib) undergoing elective surgery, according to researchers.
In the BRIDGE study, AFib patients who stopped all anticoagulant therapy before elective surgery had no higher risk of thrombosis and a lower risk of major bleeding than patients who were given bridge therapy with low-molecular weight heparin after stopping warfarin.
This research was presented at the 2015 ISTH Congress (abstract LB002) and published in NEJM.
“Bridging has been controversial because there has been a lack of data demonstrating that it’s necessary, so people don’t know what to do,” said study author Thomas L. Ortel, MD, PhD, of Duke University Medical Center in Durham, North Carolina.
“You can go to 5 different doctors, and some will bridge, and others won’t. It just depends on what they feel they can safely do. This trial gives a firm answer to that question.”
The trial enrolled 1884 patients with AFib and atrial flutter. Roughly half received bridge therapy with dalteparin, and the other half received a placebo while halting their warfarin for up to 13 days around their elective surgeries. Patients were followed for up to 37 days after their procedures.
Among patients who stopped all anticoagulant therapy, the incidence of arterial thrombosis was 0.4%, compared to 0.3% for patients who received bridge therapy (P=0.01 for noninferiority).
Major bleeding events were significantly less common among the non-bridging group. They occurred in 1.3% of patients who were not on anticoagulant therapy and 3.2% of patients who received bridge therapy (P=0.005 for superiority).
“Bridging does not improve the outcome for stroke prevention but increases the risk of major bleeding complications,” Dr Ortel said. “That’s the counter balance. We’re not doing patients any good, and we are potentially hurting them.”
Dr Ortel noted that these findings are specific to AFib patients who take warfarin and should not be generalized to other types of patients or other anticoagulants. But the results will be taken into consideration by organizations that develop guidelines.
“This is the first study to provide high-quality clinical trial data demonstrating that, for patients with atrial fibrillation who need a procedure and who need to come off warfarin, they can simply stop and restart,” Dr Ortel said. “They do not need to be bridged.”
TORONTO—Bridge anticoagulant therapy appears to be unnecessary in patients with atrial fibrillation (AFib) undergoing elective surgery, according to researchers.
In the BRIDGE study, AFib patients who stopped all anticoagulant therapy before elective surgery had no higher risk of thrombosis and a lower risk of major bleeding than patients who were given bridge therapy with low-molecular weight heparin after stopping warfarin.
This research was presented at the 2015 ISTH Congress (abstract LB002) and published in NEJM.
“Bridging has been controversial because there has been a lack of data demonstrating that it’s necessary, so people don’t know what to do,” said study author Thomas L. Ortel, MD, PhD, of Duke University Medical Center in Durham, North Carolina.
“You can go to 5 different doctors, and some will bridge, and others won’t. It just depends on what they feel they can safely do. This trial gives a firm answer to that question.”
The trial enrolled 1884 patients with AFib and atrial flutter. Roughly half received bridge therapy with dalteparin, and the other half received a placebo while halting their warfarin for up to 13 days around their elective surgeries. Patients were followed for up to 37 days after their procedures.
Among patients who stopped all anticoagulant therapy, the incidence of arterial thrombosis was 0.4%, compared to 0.3% for patients who received bridge therapy (P=0.01 for noninferiority).
Major bleeding events were significantly less common among the non-bridging group. They occurred in 1.3% of patients who were not on anticoagulant therapy and 3.2% of patients who received bridge therapy (P=0.005 for superiority).
“Bridging does not improve the outcome for stroke prevention but increases the risk of major bleeding complications,” Dr Ortel said. “That’s the counter balance. We’re not doing patients any good, and we are potentially hurting them.”
Dr Ortel noted that these findings are specific to AFib patients who take warfarin and should not be generalized to other types of patients or other anticoagulants. But the results will be taken into consideration by organizations that develop guidelines.
“This is the first study to provide high-quality clinical trial data demonstrating that, for patients with atrial fibrillation who need a procedure and who need to come off warfarin, they can simply stop and restart,” Dr Ortel said. “They do not need to be bridged.”
TORONTO—Bridge anticoagulant therapy appears to be unnecessary in patients with atrial fibrillation (AFib) undergoing elective surgery, according to researchers.
In the BRIDGE study, AFib patients who stopped all anticoagulant therapy before elective surgery had no higher risk of thrombosis and a lower risk of major bleeding than patients who were given bridge therapy with low-molecular weight heparin after stopping warfarin.
This research was presented at the 2015 ISTH Congress (abstract LB002) and published in NEJM.
“Bridging has been controversial because there has been a lack of data demonstrating that it’s necessary, so people don’t know what to do,” said study author Thomas L. Ortel, MD, PhD, of Duke University Medical Center in Durham, North Carolina.
“You can go to 5 different doctors, and some will bridge, and others won’t. It just depends on what they feel they can safely do. This trial gives a firm answer to that question.”
The trial enrolled 1884 patients with AFib and atrial flutter. Roughly half received bridge therapy with dalteparin, and the other half received a placebo while halting their warfarin for up to 13 days around their elective surgeries. Patients were followed for up to 37 days after their procedures.
Among patients who stopped all anticoagulant therapy, the incidence of arterial thrombosis was 0.4%, compared to 0.3% for patients who received bridge therapy (P=0.01 for noninferiority).
Major bleeding events were significantly less common among the non-bridging group. They occurred in 1.3% of patients who were not on anticoagulant therapy and 3.2% of patients who received bridge therapy (P=0.005 for superiority).
“Bridging does not improve the outcome for stroke prevention but increases the risk of major bleeding complications,” Dr Ortel said. “That’s the counter balance. We’re not doing patients any good, and we are potentially hurting them.”
Dr Ortel noted that these findings are specific to AFib patients who take warfarin and should not be generalized to other types of patients or other anticoagulants. But the results will be taken into consideration by organizations that develop guidelines.
“This is the first study to provide high-quality clinical trial data demonstrating that, for patients with atrial fibrillation who need a procedure and who need to come off warfarin, they can simply stop and restart,” Dr Ortel said. “They do not need to be bridged.”