Direct oral anticoagulants (DOACs) have largely replaced vitamin K antagonists, mostly warfarin, for the main indications for oral anticoagulation, prevention and treatment of venous thromboembolism, and prevention of embolic stroke in atrial fibrillation. WhileDOACs offer practical, fixed-dose anticoagulation in many patients, specific restrictions or contraindications may apply. DOACs are not sufficiently effective in high-thrombotic risk conditions such as antiphospholipid syndrome and mechanical heart valves. Patients with cancer-associated thrombosis may benefit from DOACs, but the bleeding risk, particularly in those with gastrointestinal or urogenital tumors, must be carefully weighed. In patients with frailty, excess body weight, and/or moderate-to-severe chronic kidney disease,DOACs must be cautiously administered and may require laboratory monitoring. Reversal agents have been developed and approved for life-threatening bleeding. In addition, the clinical testing of potentially safer anticoagulants such as factor XI(a) inhibitors is important to further optimize anticoagulant therapy in an increasingly elderly and frail population worldwide.

Olie, R. H., Winckers, K., Rocca, B., Ten Cate, H., Oral Anticoagulants Beyond Warfarin, <<ANNUAL REVIEW OF PHARMACOLOGY AND TOXICOLOGY>>, 2024; 64 (1): 551-575. [doi:10.1146/annurev-pharmtox-032823-122811] [https://hdl.handle.net/10807/269595]

Oral Anticoagulants Beyond Warfarin

Rocca, Bianca
Writing – Original Draft Preparation
;
2024

Abstract

Direct oral anticoagulants (DOACs) have largely replaced vitamin K antagonists, mostly warfarin, for the main indications for oral anticoagulation, prevention and treatment of venous thromboembolism, and prevention of embolic stroke in atrial fibrillation. WhileDOACs offer practical, fixed-dose anticoagulation in many patients, specific restrictions or contraindications may apply. DOACs are not sufficiently effective in high-thrombotic risk conditions such as antiphospholipid syndrome and mechanical heart valves. Patients with cancer-associated thrombosis may benefit from DOACs, but the bleeding risk, particularly in those with gastrointestinal or urogenital tumors, must be carefully weighed. In patients with frailty, excess body weight, and/or moderate-to-severe chronic kidney disease,DOACs must be cautiously administered and may require laboratory monitoring. Reversal agents have been developed and approved for life-threatening bleeding. In addition, the clinical testing of potentially safer anticoagulants such as factor XI(a) inhibitors is important to further optimize anticoagulant therapy in an increasingly elderly and frail population worldwide.
2024
Inglese
Olie, R. H., Winckers, K., Rocca, B., Ten Cate, H., Oral Anticoagulants Beyond Warfarin, <<ANNUAL REVIEW OF PHARMACOLOGY AND TOXICOLOGY>>, 2024; 64 (1): 551-575. [doi:10.1146/annurev-pharmtox-032823-122811] [https://hdl.handle.net/10807/269595]
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10807/269595
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