Antagonizing dabigatran by idarucizumab in cases of ischemic stroke or intracranial hemorrhage in Germany-Updated series of 120 cases.

Journal: International Journal Of Stroke : Official Journal Of The International Stroke Society
Published:
Abstract

Background: Idarucizumab is a monoclonal antibody fragment with high affinity for dabigatran reversing its anticoagulant effects within minutes. Thereby, patients with acute ischemic stroke who are on dabigatran treatment may become eligible for thrombolysis with recombinant tissue-type plasminogen activator (rt-PA). In patients on dabigatran with intracerebral hemorrhage idarucizumab could prevent lesion growth.

Aims: To provide insights into the clinical use of idarucizumab in patients under effective dabigatran anticoagulation presenting with signs of acute ischemic stroke or intracranial hemorrhage.

Methods: Retrospective data collected from German neurological/neurosurgical departments administering idarucizumab following product launch from January 2016 to August 2018 were used.

Results: One-hundred and twenty stroke patients received idarucizumab in 61 stroke centers. Eighty patients treated with dabigatran presented with ischemic stroke and 40 patients suffered intracranial bleeding (intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH) in n = 27). In patients receiving intravenous thrombolysis with rt-PA following idarucizumab, 78% showed a median improvement of 7 points in National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale. No bleeding complications were reported. Hematoma growth was observed in 3 out of 27 patients with ICH. Outcome was favorable with a median National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale improvement of 4 points and modified Rankin score 0-3 in 61%. Six out of 40 individuals (15%) with intracranial bleeding died during hospital stay.

Conclusion: Administration of rt-PA after reversal of dabigatran activity with idarucizumab in case of acute ischemic stroke seems feasible, effective, and safe. In dabigatran-associated intracranial hemorrhage, idarucizumab appears to prevent hematoma growth and to improve outcome.

Authors
Pawel Kermer, Christoph Eschenfelder, Hans-christoph Diener, Martin Grond, Yasser Abdalla, Alexej Abraham, Katharina Althaus, Gebhard Becks, Jörg Berrouschot, Jörg Berthel, Felix Bode, Lothar Burghaus, Hakan Cangür, Michael Daffertshofer, Sebastian Edelbusch, Jürgen Eggers, Rüdiger Gerlach, Klaus Gröschel, Florian Große Dresselhaus, Albrecht Günther, Claus Haase, Carl-albrecht Haensch, Andreas Harloff, Joseph Heckmann, Valentin Held, Maren Hieber, Andreas Kauert, Rolf Kern, Thomas Kerz, Martin Köhrmann, Peter Kraft, Peter Kühnlein, Jan Latta, Elke Leinisch, Arne Lenz, Christoph Leithner, Tobias Neumann Haefelin, Mathias Mäurer, Wolfgang Müllges, Christian Nolte, Mark Obermann, Someieh Partowi, Peer Patzschke, Sven Poli, Ulrich Pulkowski, Jan Purrucker, Torsten Rehfeldt, Peter Ringleb, Joachim Röther, Raluca Rossi, Hazem El Sabassy, Oliver Sauer, Gabriele Schackert, Niklas Schäfer, Peter Schellinger, Andreas Schneider, Ramona Schuppner, Stefan Schwab, Olav Schwarte, Rüdiger Seitz, Sebastian Senger, Yogesh Shah, Eckhart Sindern, Paul Sparenberg, Thorsten Steiner, Kristina Szabo, Christian Urbanek, Bettina Sarnowksi, Karin Weissenborn, Peter Wienecke, Karsten Witt, Robert Wruck, Silke Wunderlich
Relevant Conditions

Stroke