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. 2014 Dec 2;11(1):85–95. doi: 10.1007/s13181-014-0448-6

Table 4.

Reported cases in the literature of extracorporeal removal of dabigatran for emergency surgery

Reference Case Type of surgery Serum creatinine at presentation Baseline coagulation parametersa Method and duration of extracorporeal removal Laboratory parameters after extracorporeal removal Outcome
Carrizo et al. [67] 85-year-old male Emergency surgery for perforated diverticulitis 1.19 mg/dL aPTT = 70 s
TT >120 s
Hemodialysis, 3 h aPTT = 48 s
TT = 60 s
No bleeding complications. Patient discharged after 5 days of hospitalization
Esnault et al. [66] 62-year-old female Urgent surgery for hematoma removal NRb Plasma dabigatran concentration = 123 ng/mL
aPTT = 63 s
Hemodialysis, 2 h Plasma dabigatran concentration = 11 ng/mL
aPTT = 41 s
Patient discharged after 10 days of hospitalization
Wanek et al. [34] 59-year-old female Cardiac transplantation NRc TT = 90.6 s Hemodialysis, 2.5 h TT = 60.2 s TT remained prolonged and sustained for nearly 24 h after surgery. No bleeding complications

aPTT activated partial thromboplastin time, TT thrombin time

aReference ranges: aPTT = 23–38 s; PT = 9.5–13.8 s; TT = 15–23 s. A plasma dabigatran concentration greater than 200 ng/mL increases a patient’s risk for bleeding. ECT reference range determined from a calibration curve and is laboratory-specific. Please note that these values are generally institution-specific and can vary [56]

bSerum creatinine was not reported; however, the authors reported a creatinine clearance of 39 mL/min

cSerum creatinine was not reported; however, the authors reported a creatinine clearance of 40 mL/min