Evolving anticoagulation paradigms in left ventricular assist device (LVAD) patients: a focus on direct oral anticoagulants.
Review published in Heart failure reviews (2025)
Abstract
Anticoagulation management in patients supported by left ventricular assist devices (LVADs) is essential to prevent thromboembolic events while minimizing bleeding complications. Warfarin remains the standard therapy but is constrained by a narrow therapeutic index, dietary restrictions, and the need for frequent monitoring, prompting growing interest in direct oral anticoagulants (DOACs) as alternatives. The HeartMate 3 (HM3), now the predominant LVAD in clinical practice, features improved hemocompatibility and has demonstrated reduced rates of pump thrombosis and ischemic stroke compared to earlier-generation devices. These advances raise the possibility of simplified antithrombotic regimens tailored to specific device profiles. Retrospective studies suggest that DOACs, particularly apixaban, may provide comparable thromboembolic protection and potentially lower bleeding risk than warfarin, especially when aspirin is omitted. Additionally, DOACs offer more predictable pharmacokinetics, fewer interactions, and improved patient adherence due to reduced monitoring requirements. However, current evidence remains limited by small sample sizes, short follow-up durations, and heterogeneous study designs. Many existing studies include patients with older devices such as HeartMate II and HVAD, which are no longer implanted but remain in a substantial number of living patients. These legacy devices carry distinct thrombogenic risks that complicate generalizability. This review evaluates the emerging role of DOACs in the context of modern and legacy LVAD platforms. While initial data are promising, large-scale, prospective randomized trials are needed particularly in HM3-supported patients to define the optimal anticoagulation strategy.
Abstract sourced from PubMed (NCBI) for the cited record. See the original publication for the authoritative version.
Summary
Anticoagulation management in patients supported by left ventricular assist devices (LVADs) is essential to prevent thromboembolic events while minimizing bleeding complications.
Why This Matters for Hirudotherapy
This review examines the shifting anticoagulation landscape for left ventricular assist device (LVAD) patients, noting that warfarin remains standard but is limited by its narrow therapeutic index and monitoring burden, while retrospective data suggest direct oral anticoagulants (particularly apixaban) may offer comparable thromboembolic protection with potentially lower bleeding risk in the newer, more hemocompatible HeartMate 3 device. For ASH it captures the field-wide movement away from warfarin toward agents with more predictable pharmacology — the very rationale that makes directly-acting, target-specific antithrombotic molecules, including those derived from or inspired by the leech secretome, an active area of drug-discovery interest. Honest caveat: the review itself stresses that current LVAD/DOAC evidence is limited by small samples, short follow-up, and heterogeneous designs, and that prospective randomized trials are still needed; it is a review with no leech-therapy content, cited by ASH purely as context on evolving anticoagulation strategy.
Citation
Evolving anticoagulation paradigms in left ventricular assist device (LVAD) patients: a focus on direct oral anticoagulants.
Ndakotsu A et al. · Heart failure reviews, 2025
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