Low bleeding risk
Hand surgery
Shoulder and knee arthroscopy
Minor spine surgery
Intermediate bleeding risk
Prosthetic shoulder surgery
Major spine surgery
Knee surgery (anterior cruciate ligament, osteotomies)
Foot surgery
High bleeding risk
Major prosthetic surgery (hip or knee)
Major traumatology (pelvis, long bones)
Fractures of the proximal femur in the elderly
The present document is the first consensus to provide practical recommendations on the management of antiplatelet therapy in patients with coronary stents, undergoing diverse orthopedic interventions. Briefly, stent thrombosis risk is stratified in low, intermediate, and high (Table 3.2), and the most appropriate antiplatelet therapy and management is defined for each intervention, on the basis of the ischemic and hemorrhagic risk (Table 3.3).
Table 3.2
Definition of thrombotic risk in patients with coronary stents
Low risk | Intermediate risk | High risk |
---|---|---|
>6 months after PCI with BMS | >1 month <6 months after PCI with BMS | <1 month after PCI with BMS |
>12 months after PCI with DES | >6 months <12 months after PCI with DES | <6 months after PCI with DES |
>12 months after complex PCI with DES (long stents, multiple stents, overlapping, small vessels, bifurcations, left main, last remaining vessel). | <12 months after complex PCI with DES (long stents, multiple stents, overlapping, small vessels, bifurcations, left main, last remaining vessel) |
Table 3.3
Perioperative antiplatelet therapy in patients with coronary stents undergoing orthopedic surgery
Orthopedic surgery | Thrombotic risk | |||
---|---|---|---|---|
Low risk | Intermediate risk | High risk | ||
Hemorrhagic risk | Low risk | ASA: continue | Elective surgery: postpone | Elective surgery: postpone |
Hand surgery | P2Y12 receptor inhibitors | Non-deferrable surgery | Non-deferrable surgery | |
Shoulder and knee arthroscopy | Discontinue 5 days beforea | ASA: continue | ASA: continue | |
Minor spine surgery l | Resume within 24–72 h, with a loading dose | P2Y12 receptor inhibitors | P2Y12 receptor inhibitors: | |
Discontinue 5 days beforea | Continue | |||
Resume within 24–72 h, with a loading doseb | ||||
Intermediate risk | ASA: continue | Elective surgery: postpone | Elective surgery: postpone | |
Prosthetic shoulder surgery | P2Y12 receptor inhibitors | Non-deferrable surgery | Non-deferrable surgery | |
Major spine surgery | Discontinue 5 days beforea | ASA: continue | ASA: continue | |
Knee surgery (anterior cruciate ligament, osteotomies) | Resume within 24–72 h, with a loading dose | P2Y12 receptor inhibitors: | P2Y12 receptor inhibitors | |
Foot surgery | Discontinue 5 days beforea | Discontinue 5 days beforea | ||
Resume within 24–72 h, with a loading doseb | Resume within 24–72 h, with a loading dose | |||
Bridge therapy with GPIIb/IIIa inhibitorsb | ||||
High risk | ASA: continue | Elective surgery: postpone | Elective surgery: postpone | |
Major prosthetic surgery (hip or knee) | P2Y12 receptor inhibitors | Non-deferrable surgery | Non-deferrable surgery | |
Major traumatology (pelvis, long bones) | Discontinue 5 days beforea | ASA: continue | ASA: continue | |
Fractures of the proximal femur in the elderly | Resume within 24–72 h, with a loading dose | P2Y12 receptor inhibitors | P2Y12 receptor inhibitors | |
Discontinue 5 days beforea | Discontinue 5 days beforea,c | |||
Resume within 24–72 h, with a loading doseb | Resume within 24–72 h, with a loading dose | |||
Bridge therapy with GPIIb/IIIa inhibitorsb |
This stratification allows to define in detail the optimal antiplatelet regimen which should be maintained in the perioperative period, thus avoiding an arbitrary management. Of note, it is important to define the ideal timing of the orthopedic intervention as elective procedures should be delayed until a low cardiac ischemic risk is reached.
3.4 Antiplatelet Therapy: To Stop or to Maintain?
The antiplatelet therapy (especially aspirin) has to be maintained whenever possible, especially when the ischemic risk is intermediate or high due to the extremely enhanced risk of ST. In case of withdrawal of the antiplatelet therapy in the perioperative phase, cardiologists recommend restarting the drugs as soon as possible after the intervention (ideally 24–48 h later), with a loading dose. In selected cases, such as patients with high ischemic and hemorrhagic risk, in whom the discontinuation of the oral antiplatelet therapy is necessary, the “bridge therapy” is advocated (Rossini et al. 2012, 2014). This consists of the intravenous, prolonged infusion of glycoprotein (GP) IIb/IIIa inhibitor (tirofiban or eptifibatide), a potent antiplatelet drug which acts as the oral antiplatelet therapies, thus preventing ST. It is a short-acting drug given intravenously. Patients undergoing “bridge therapy” withdraw DAPT or only the second antiplatelet agent 5 days before surgery (7 days in case of therapy with prasugrel). The infusion of GP IIb/IIIa inhibitor starts 3 days before the intervention and is stopped 4 h before surgery (8 h in the case of creatinine clearance <30 ml min−1). Oral antiplatelet therapy should be resumed within 24–48 h after the intervention. Of note, GP IIb/IIIa inhibitors are potent antiplatelet effects and are associated with an increased risk of bleeding during their infusion. Afterward, they might be contraindicated in patients with an active, clinically relevant bleeding. This therapy should be prescribed by cardiologists and administered in a cardiologic ward. “Bridge therapy” is currently off-label for perioperative period management of antiplatelet therapy (Douketis et al. 2008).
3.5 Conclusions
The risk of ST is significantly increased after premature discontinuation of DAPT. The management of the antiplatelet therapy in patients with coronary stents undergoing orthopedic procedures is still challenging and surely requires both an orthopedic and a cardiologic thorough assessment. It appears evident that the right direction is toward the application in clinical practice of the consensus documents available. The document endorsed by cardiologists, orthopedics, and anesthesiologists recommends to perioperatively discontinue the antiplatelet drugs if the known or assumed perioperative bleeding risks and their sequels are expected to be similar or more severe than the observed cardiovascular thrombotic risks after antiplatelet therapy withdrawal. A prospective case registry is now ongoing in Italy (the Surgery After Stenting (SAS) registry; ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT01997242), and its results might be a helpful tool to improve the DAPT patients’ management. To potentially improve the quality of evidence derived from the consensus document, randomized studies could be considered merely from a methodological point of view. However, a comparison between surgery performed with versus without DAPT is not ethical for benign disease, due to the extremely increased risk of ST. Probably, the only possible comparison could be between traditional versus minimally invasive surgery during DAPT in high-risk cardiovascular patients.
References
ACCF/SCAI/STS/AATS/AHA/ASNC 2009 Appropriateness Criteria for Coronary Revascularization: a report by the American College of Cardiology Foundation Appropriateness Criteria Task Force, Society for Cardiovascular Angiography and Interventions, Society of Thoracic Surgeons, American Association for Thoracic Surgery, American Heart Association, and the American Society of Nuclear Cardiology Endorsed by the American Society of Echocardiography, the Heart Failure Society of America, and the Society of Cardiovascular Computed Tomography (2009) J Am Coll Cardiol 53(6):530–553