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(1)
Discontinue DTI when ICH is present or suspected (good practice statement)
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(2)
Pharmacological reversal of DTI should be guided primarily by bleeding (major or intracranial) and not primarily by laboratory testing (conditional recommendation, low-quality evidence)
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(3)
Suggest administering activated charcoal (50 g) to intubated intracranial hemorrhage patients with enteral access and/or those at low risk of aspiration who present within 2 h of ingestion of an oral direct thrombin inhibitor (conditional recommendation, very low-quality evidence)
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(4)
Recommend administering idarucizumab (5 g IV in two divided doses) to patients with ICH associated with dabigatran if dabigatran was administered:
Within a period of 3–5 half-lives and there is no evidence of renal failure (strong recommendation, moderate quality of evidence) or
There is renal insufficiency leading to continued drug exposure beyond the normal 3–5 half-lives (strong recommendation, moderate quality of evidence)
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(5)
Suggest administering aPCC (50 U/kg) or 4-factor PCC (50 U/kg) to patients with ICH associated with DTI if idarucizumab is not available or if the hemorrhage is associated with a DTI other than dabigatran
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(6)
In patients with dabigatran-associated ICH and renal insufficiency or dabigatran overdose, suggest hemodialysis if idarucizumab is not available (conditional recommendation, low-quality data)
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(7)
In patients with dabigatran-associated ICH who have already been treated with idarucizumab, PCC, or aPCC, with ongoing evidence of clinically significant bleeding, we suggest consideration of redosing idarucizumab and/or hemodialysis (Conditional recommendation, low-quality evidence)
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(8)
Recommend against administration of rFVIIa or FFP in direct thrombin inhibitor-related intracranial hemorrhage (strong recommendation, low-quality evidence)