The American College of Cardiology (ACC) has published a guidance document for periprocedural management of anticoagulation in patients with nonvalvular atrial fibrillation (NVAF).
The document includes recommendations on how and when to stop anticoagulants in NVAF patients undergoing surgery, deciding if a substitute medication should be used, and determining when it is safe for patients to resume anticoagulants after surgery.
The document was published in the Journal of the American College of Cardiology.
“With this new decision pathway [document], physicians will be able to make better-informed decisions, and this will contribute to improved patient outcomes,” said John U. Doherty, MD, chair of the document writing committee.
“In North America alone, more than 250,000 nonvalvular atrial fibrillation patients undergo surgery annually, so this document will impact many people.”
The document provides guidance on:
- The overall decision to keep a patient chronically on an anticoagulant by examining whether anticoagulation is warranted based on overall thrombotic risk.
- The decision to take the patient off an anticoagulant temporarily.
- How to temporarily stop the use of vitamin K antagonists and direct-acting oral anticoagulants.
- Deciding if bridging a patient—temporarily discontinuing an oral anticoagulant and replacing it with a subcutaneous or intravenous anticoagulant—before, during, and after surgery is the best choice.
- Deciding how to bridge before, during, and after surgery.
- Deciding how and when to restart the patient’s regular anticoagulant after surgery.