Introduction

New oral anticoagulants are effective alternatives to warfarin; however, no specific reversal agents are currently available for life-threatening bleeding or emergency surgery. This study measured the effects of prothrombin complex concentrate (PCC), activated PCC (aPCC) and recombinant factor VIIa (rFVIIa) and compared this to reversal with the specific antibody fragment for dabigatran after high-dose dabigatran etexilate (DE) treatment in a porcine model of trauma, to assess reversal of anticoagulation.

Methods

Studies were performed in 5 male pigs after ethical approval. DE was given orally for 3 days (30 mg/kg bid) and, on the 4th day, dabigatran was infused at 0.77mg/kg/h for 30 min followed by 0.52 mg/kg/min for 60 min. The infusion was administered immediately before trauma (blunt liver insult). Blood samples were taken before dabigatran infusion and 60 min post-injury. Two doses of PCC (30 and 60 IU/kg), aPCC (30 and 60 IU/kg) and rVIIa (90 and 180 μg/kg) and two doses anti-Dabi Fab (30 and 60 mg/kg) were added to blood samples ex vivo. Coagulation was assessed by thromboelastometry (ExTEM assay) and PT and dabigatran levels with diluted TT. Data were analyzed by ANOVA (± SEM).

Results

Oral DE prolonged clot formation (CT: 389 ± 128 sec; CFT: 159 ± 39 sec) and PT (27 ± 9 sec), but coagulopathy was more severe after achieving high dabigatran plasma levels (943 ± 147 ng/ml) and inducing trauma (CT: 2378 ± 480 sec; CFT: 3374 ± 625 sec; PT: 167 ± 40 sec). At this time point, 30 IU/kg PCC and 30 IU/kg aPCC significantly accelerated clot formation (PCC: CT 416 ± 70 sec, CFT 250 ± 91 sec; aPCC: CT 525 ± 126 sec, CFT 309 ± 60 sec; p<0.05 vs. untreated samples). These interventions also shortened PT (PCC: 53 ± 14 sec; aPCC: 66 ± 16 sec; p<0.05 vs. untreated samples). Higher doses of PCC and aPCC had no further effect on hemostatic parameters. rFVIIa had no impact on coagulopathy at any time point. Addition of the specific antidote to dabigatran completely normalized all coagulation parameters to baseline levels.

Conclusion

The ex vivo addition of either PCC or aPCC is effective in reducing coagulopathy in a porcine model of high-dose dabigatran therapy and trauma. However the specific aDabi-Fab is the most promising agent to reverse the anticoagulant effects of dabigatran. The potential for reducing blood loss remains to be investigated.

Disclosures:

van Ryn:Boehringer Ingelheim Pharma GmbH & Co. KG: Employment. Spronk:Boehringer Ingelheim Pharma GmbH & Co. KG: Research Funding. Rossaint:Boehringer Ingelheim: Research Funding. Grottke:Boehringer Ingelheim: Research Funding; CSL Behring: Consultancy.

Author notes

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Asterisk with author names denotes non-ASH members.

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