So not only do you have to have the perfect
stroke symptoms to get diagnosed correctly, you have to not have a
pre-existing disability and you shouldn't be taking a NOAC(dabigatran, etc.) Welcome to the real world of not knowing
whether you will even be treated for your stroke.
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Originally published9 Aug 2018Stroke. 2018;49:2237–2240
Abstract
Background and Purpose—
Although
there are no trials or large cohorts to inform clinical care, current
guidelines caution against giving intravenous tPA (tissue-type
plasminogen activator) to patients with acute ischemic stroke who are
taking non–vitamin K antagonist oral anticoagulants (NOACs). We
performed a literature review of intravenous tPA in patients treated
with NOACs preceding stroke.
Methods—
A
literature search of PubMed was performed encompassing January 2010 to
March 2018. Patient characteristics, timing of last medication intake,
laboratory testing, use of reversal, and outcomes ≤3 months after
discharge were summarized.
Results—
We
identified 55 studies with 492 NOAC patients receiving tPA (dabigatran,
181; rivaroxaban, 215; apixaban, 40; and unspecified NOAC, 56). Among
patients with complete data, the median time from the last NOAC intake
to symptom onset was 8 hours (interquartile range, 2.5–14.5), with 55.2%
(80/145) within 12 hours. Few patients underwent sensitive laboratory
tests, such as thrombin time, diluted thrombin time, or anti-Xa assays
before tPA administration. The overall observed rates of symptomatic
intracranial hemorrhage, mortality, and favorable outcomes (National
Institutes of Health Stroke Scale score, ≤1; modified Rankin Scale
score, 0–2; or neurological improvement in the National Institutes of
Health Stroke Scale score, ≥8 points) were 4.3% (20/462), 11.3%
(48/423), and 43.7% (164/375), respectively. Among dabigatran-treated
patients, reversal with idarucizumab was associated with fewer
symptomatic intracranial hemorrhage (4.5% [2/44] versus 7.4% [8/108];
unadjusted odds ratio, 0.60; 95% CI, 0.12–2.92), death (4.5% [2/44]
versus 12.0% [13/108]; unadjusted odds ratio, 0.35; 95% CI, 0.08–1.61),
and more favorable outcomes (79.1% [34/43] versus 39.2% [29/74];
unadjusted odds ratio, 5.86; 95% CI, 2.45–14.00), although the
differences were not statistically significant for symptomatic
intracranial hemorrhage and death.
Conclusions—
These
preliminary observations suggest that tPA may be reasonably well
tolerated without prohibitive risks of bleeding complications in
selected patients on NOACs. Reversal of anticoagulant effects by
idarucizumab for dabigatran-treated patients before tPA is an emerging
strategy that was associated with more favorable outcomes.
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