10. Anticoagulants Flashcards

1
Q

Which drugs would you recommend to treat a DVT or PE? An MI?

no contra-indications

A

DVT/PE: warfarin (with heparin cover whilst warfarin loading is achieved)

MI: aspirin (+/- heparin)

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2
Q

Which drug would you recommend to treat/prevent DVT/PE in pregnant women? Why?

A

Heparin (with caution) - is not teratogenic whereas warfarin is

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3
Q

Explain the MOA of warfarin.

A

Inhibits production of vitK-dependent clotting factors (II, VII, IX and X) by competitive inhibition of vitK epoxide reductase (which recycles vitK).

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4
Q

Does warfarin require monitoring?

A

Yes, INR monitoring required (indicator of extrinsic pathway) as has slow action onset (T1/2 48hrs) and variable effect

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5
Q

When is warfarin use indicated? What INR should be achieved?

A
  1. Treatment and prophylaxis of venous thrombi: DVT and PE (INR: 2-3)
  2. Prophylaxis in AF (INR: 2-3), mechanical prosthetic valves, inherited thrombophilias (INR: 2.5-4.5)
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6
Q

Name an important ADR of warfarin? How can risk be reduced?

A

Increased risk of haemorrhage: intracranial, GI loss, epistaxis, injection site.

So INR should not be higher than 4-5 as risk of intracranial bleed severely increased.

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7
Q

How is warfarin administered? And initiated?

A
  • Oral administration (good GI absorption)

- Initiation: loading dose (with heparin cover) then schedule dosing according to INR

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8
Q

How is warfarin metabolised? What are the consequent cautions/contra-indications?

A

Hepatic metabolism with CYP450s so cautions/contra-indications include:

  1. liver disease
  2. drugs inhibiting CYP450s (increase warfarin effect): amiodarone, quinolones, metronidazole, alcohol

(if taking CYP450 inducer drugs - anti-epileptics, rifampicin, St Johns Wort - may need to increase dose)

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9
Q

How can warfarin therapy be reversed if INR increases too much/bleeding occurs?

A
  • INR <8 (no/minor bleeding): stop warfarin, restart with INR <5
  • INR >8 (no/minor bleeding): stop warfarin, restart when INR <5 and give 0.5-2.5mg oral vitK if other bleeding risk factors
  • major bleeding: stop warfarin, give PT complex concentrate or FFP and give 5mg oral/IV vitK
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10
Q

What are the 2 types of heparin? What is their MOA?

A
  1. Unfractionated heparin
    i. binds to anti-thrombin III (increases its activity) and thrombin… inactivates thrombin
    ii. binds to anti-thrombin … stimulates FXa inactivation
  2. LMWH
    i. binds to ATIII… stimulates FXa inactivation
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11
Q

How are UH and LMWH administered?

A

Poor GI absorption so:

  • UH: IV (loading bolus then IVI)
  • LMWH: SC, long T1/2 so less frequent dosing (once/twice daily)
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12
Q

Does heparin use require monitoring?

A
  1. UH:
    • has variable bioavailability (binds macrophages, endothelial cells, plasma proteins)… less predictable dose response and variable action
    • requires APTT monitoring
  2. LMWH:
    • high bioavailability >90%… predictable dose response
    • no monitoring required
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13
Q

What are the indications for heparin therapy?

A
  1. treatment for DVT and PE, prophylaxis in AF - cover P whilst warfarin loading achieved (LMWH unless fine control required)
  2. Treatment for ACSs (MI and UA) - reduces recurrence/extension
  3. Prophylaxis in peri-operative (inc. Ps on wafarin stopped for surgery) or immobile Ps - low dose LMWH
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14
Q

Name 4 possible ADRs of heparin.

A
  1. Haemorrhage: intracranial, GI loss, epistaxis
  2. Thrombocytopenia (rare): autoimmune reaction as heparin is immunogenic. Results in platelet depletion and bleeding.
  3. Osteoporosis (if long term use)
  4. Hyperkalaemia: hepatin-induced aldosterone suppression
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15
Q

How can heparin therapy be reversed if required?

A

Protamine sulphate - irreversibly binds hepatin and neutralises its negative sulphate charge… dissociates from AT III

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16
Q

Name 2 examples of novel anti-coagulation drugs and describe their MOA.

A
  1. Factor Xa inhibitors (e.g. rivaroxaban, apixaban)
    - bind anti-thrombin III… inactivate Xa (no effect on thrombin)
  2. Thrombin inhibitors (e.g. hirudin)
    - selectively inactivate thrombin (no effect on Xa)
17
Q

Describe the MOA of aspirin.

A

irreversibly inhibits COX1 in platelets… inhibits thromboxane A2 production (+PGs)… prevents platelet aggregation by decrease expression of GPIIb-IIIa

18
Q

Name 2 indications for aspirin.

A
  1. Treatment of ACSs: UA and MIs

2. Prophylaxis following coronary bypass surgery

19
Q

Name 3 possible ADRs of aspirin.

A
  1. Haemorrhage
  2. GI irritation/ulceration (peptic ulcers = contra-indication)
  3. Bronchospasms (asthma = caution)
20
Q

Name a drug that can be used as an adjunct to aspirin or in cases of aspirin intolerance. What is its MOA?

A

Clopidogrel: irreversible inhibitor of P2Y12 ADP R (important in platelet actiavation and fibrin cross-linking)

21
Q

Name 2 anti-platelet drugs other than aspirin and clopidogrel. What is their MOA?

A
  1. Glycoprotein IIb/IIIa inhibitors
    - inhibit GPIIb and IIIa Rs… decreases platelet cross-linking by fibrin (normally binds these Rs)
  2. Dipyrimadole
    - inhibits phosphodiesterase… inhibits cAMP breakdown… prevents platelet aggregation