Venous Thromboembolism Prophylaxis After TKA: Aspirin, Warfarin, Enoxaparin, or Factor Xa Inhibitors?

Jun 2, 2017Clinical orthopaedics and related research

Preventing Blood Clots After Knee Replacement: Aspirin, Warfarin, Enoxaparin, or Factor Xa Inhibitors?

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Abstract

At 90 days post-surgery, factor Xa inhibitors had a 2.9% incidence of deep venous thrombosis (DVT), the lowest among the agents studied.

  • Aspirin (3.0%) and enoxaparin (3.5%) followed factor Xa inhibitors in DVT incidence, while warfarin had the highest at 4.8%.
  • Incidence of pulmonary embolism (PE) at 90 days was lowest with factor Xa inhibitors (0.9%), followed by enoxaparin (1.1%), aspirin (1.2%), and warfarin (1.6%).
  • Aspirin showed the lowest incidence of postoperative anemia (19%), whereas warfarin, enoxaparin, and factor Xa inhibitors had higher rates (22%, 23%, and 23% respectively).
  • Blood transfusion rates at 90 days were lowest for aspirin (7%), with factor Xa inhibitors (9%), warfarin (12%), and enoxaparin (13%) following.
  • There were no significant differences in bleeding-related complications among the four agents (p = 0.81).
  • During the study period, factor Xa inhibitors saw the highest increase in utilization at a compound annual growth rate of 43%, while warfarin use declined by 3%.

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