Overview

Pilot RCT of Anticoagulation Therapy Timing in Atrial Fibrillation After Acute and Chronic Subdural Hematoma

Status:
Not yet recruiting
Trial end date:
2025-03-01
Target enrollment:
0
Participant gender:
All
Summary
Subdural hematoma (SDH) is a common disorder that typically results from head trauma and has increased in prevalence in recent decades. Acute subdural hematomas (aSDH) are found in up to one-third of patients with severe traumatic brain injury and are associated with an unfavorable outcome in the majority of cases. Chronic subdural hematomas (cSDH) commonly occur in the elderly population which has highest risk for developing cSDH with or without minor head injuries. The combination of the aging population, higher incidence of disease in progressively older patients, and high morbidity and mortality renders SDH a growing problem within Canada with significant health-systems burden. SDH commonly recurs even after successful surgical drainage. Atrial fibrillation (AF) is one of the most common medical comorbidities in patients with cSDH, especially in the elderly, with an expected doubling of its prevalence by the year 2030. Patients with AF are at recognized risk for stroke, so anticoagulation is indicated for almost all patients. Anticoagulation is held prior to SDH drainage to minimize the risk of intraoperative and early postoperative bleeding. After surgery, the risk of SDH recurrence must be balanced against the risk of thromboembolic events such as stroke when deciding the timing of resuming anticoagulation. Currently the decision on when to restart anticoagulation after SDH is made by clinicians on an individual patient basis without any high-quality evidence to guide this decision. The two most common approaches are: 1) early resumption of anticoagulation after 30 days of diagnosis or surgery; and 2) delayed resumption of anticoagulation after 90 days of diagnosis or surgery. However, which of these approaches leads to the best functional outcomes for patients is unclear. Our pilot RCT will test the feasibility of comparing these 2 approaches in a larger multicenter RCT.
Phase:
N/A
Accepts Healthy Volunteers?
No
Details
Lead Sponsor:
Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre
Treatments:
Anticoagulants
Factor Xa Inhibitors
Criteria
Inclusion Criteria:

1. ≥18 years of age

2. Any SDH, defined as either acute or encapsulated partially liquefied hematoma in the
subdural space diagnosed on a CT scan

3. Can have surgical drainage (either burr hole or craniotomy) for aSDH and cSDH

4. On therapeutic anticoagulation (DOAC or warfarin) as standard of care therapy prior to
presentation for stroke prophylaxis secondary to AF

Exclusion Criteria:

1. aSDH requiring decompressive craniectomy

2. Mechanical heart valve or moderate to severe mitral stenosis

3. Known chronic coagulopathy (elevated INR >1.5 or PTT>40s after anticoagulant reversal,
thrombocytopenia with platelet count <50x109/L) that is not amenable to reversal

4. >35 days has elapsed since initial diagnosis without recruitment into the trial

5. Active gastroduodenal ulcer, urogenital or respiratory tract hemorrhage

6. Known pregnancy or breastfeeding

7. Indication for therapeutic anticoagulation other than AF

8. Pre-randomization brain CT at 2-4 weeks after initial diagnosis or surgery date
reveals significant recurrence requiring surgical drainage

9. Known to be non-compliant with prior anticoagulant

10. MRP decides to restart Warfarin (as opposed to DOACs) as prophylactic anticoagulant as
part of standard therapy for the patient after cSDH or aSDH