Journal of Clinical Medicine (Dec 2023)

Direct Oral Anticoagulants in Special Patient Populations

  • Asa Kessler,
  • Yotam Kolben,
  • Gal Puris,
  • Martin Ellis,
  • Mordechai Alperin,
  • Vered Simovich,
  • Hila Lerman Shivek,
  • Mordechai Muszkat,
  • Yoram Maaravi,
  • Yitschak Biton

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm13010216
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 1
p. 216

Abstract

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Anticoagulants are a cornerstone of treatment in atrial fibrillation. Nowadays, direct oral anticoagulants (DOACs) are extensively used for this condition in developed countries. However, DOAC treatment may be inappropriate in certain patient populations, such as: patients with chronic kidney disease in whom DOAC concentrations may be dangerously elevated; frail elderly patients with an increased risk of falls; patients with significant drug–drug interactions (DDI) affecting either DOAC concentration or effect; patients at the extremes of body mass in whom an “abnormal” volume of distribution may result in inappropriate drug concentrations; patients with recurrent stroke reflecting an unusually high thromboembolic tendency; and, lastly, patients who experience major hemorrhage on an anticoagulant and in whom continued anticoagulation is deemed necessary. Herein we provide a fictional case-based approach to review the recommendations for the use of DOACs in these special patient populations.

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