Drug Interactions
Medication review and management during leech therapy
Last Updated: March 5, 2026Reviewed by: Andrei Dokukin, MD
Last updated: March 14, 2026
Clinical Reference
This drug interaction reference is for educational purposes. All medication adjustments must be made by the prescribing physician or in coordination with the surgical team. For post-operative microsurgical patients, anticoagulation decisions must be coordinated with the operating surgeon — 54.29% of microsurgical leech protocols use concomitant anticoagulation (Whitaker et al., 2012).
Medications to Hold or Adjust
| Drug Class | Action | Rationale |
|---|---|---|
| Warfarin | Hold 3-5 days before (per INR) | Excessive bleeding risk; target INR ≤3.0 |
| DOACs (apixaban, rivaroxaban, dabigatran) | Hold 24-48 hours before | Excessive bleeding risk |
| Heparin (IV) | Hold 4-6 hours before | Short half-life; check aPTT |
| LMWH (enoxaparin) | Hold 12-24 hours before | Depends on dose (prophylactic vs therapeutic) |
| Aspirin | Hold 7 days for elective outpatient; surgeon discretion for surgical | Platelet inhibition; do not routinely hold for surgical indications |
| Clopidogrel | Hold 5-7 days for elective cases | Increased bleeding duration |
| NSAIDs (ibuprofen, naproxen) | Hold 3-5 days before; avoid post-procedure | Platelet inhibition + GI risk; avoid for 48h post-procedure |
| Immunosuppressants | Do not hold; increase infection surveillance | Higher Aeromonas infection risk |
Antibiotic Prophylaxis Interactions
Standard Prophylaxis
- Ciprofloxacin 500 mg BID: Standard first-line. Avoid with QT-prolonging drugs. Monitor INR if co-administered with warfarin (fluoroquinolone-warfarin interaction).
- TMP-SMX DS BID: Alternative first-line. Increases warfarin effect (monitor INR). Caution with potassium-sparing diuretics (hyperkalemia).
- Combination (both): Recommended by Herlin et al. (2017) given emerging ciprofloxacin resistance.
Allergy-Based Alternatives
- Fluoroquinolone allergy: TMP-SMX DS alone
- Sulfa allergy: Ciprofloxacin alone
- Both allergies: Ceftriaxone 1 g IV daily
- Pediatric: TMP-SMX (4-5 mg/kg TMP component BID)
First-generation cephalosporins (cefazolin, cephalexin) are inadequate — Aeromonas has intrinsic high-level resistance.
Post-Procedure Pain Management
Safe Analgesics During Leech Therapy
| Agent | Status | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Acetaminophen | First-line | 650-1,000 mg PO q6h PRN; no platelet effect |
| Ibuprofen / Naproxen | Avoid 48h post | Platelet inhibition prolongs bleeding |
| Aspirin | Avoid 7 days post | Unless cardiac indication requires continuation |
| Oxycodone (low-dose) | Surgical patients | 5 mg PO q4-6h PRN for moderate-severe pain |
| Diphenhydramine | For itching | 25-50 mg q6h PRN (37-75% develop itching) |
Contraindicated Drug Combinations
Absolute & Relative Contraindications
Absolute:
- Therapeutic anticoagulation + leech therapy without surgeon coordination
- Cefazolin as sole Aeromonas prophylaxis
- NSAIDs within 48h post-procedure
Relative (increased monitoring):
- Immunosuppressants (increased infection risk)
- Chronic corticosteroids (impaired wound healing)
- Chemotherapy (bone marrow suppression)
- Multiple antiplatelet agents
