Warfarin
Patients are prescribed long term warfarin to reduce the life time risk of stroke, transient ischaemic attack (TIA) or venous thrombo-embolism (VTE). The decision to stop warfarin before surgery and the timing of restarting afterwards reflects a balance between risk of surgical bleeding and the risk of a repeat event and some patients may wish to be involved in the decision.
For a patient prescribed warfarin after a recent stroke, TIA or VTE consider postponing elective surgery for three to six months (see next page).
Before surgery:
Can surgery proceed without stopping warfarin? (If not known, check with patient’s surgeon).
For example: some patients undergoing dental extraction, simple biopsy procedures or where the operation site is easily compressed.
If warfarin is to be stopped before surgery, the last dose should be taken on Day - 6 (where Day 0 is date of surgery).
Further management is guided by risk stratification, based on the indication for warfarin, see page 3.
Patients at increased risk of thrombosis may require peri-operative therapeutic anticoagulation (BRIDGING) with Low Molecular Weight Heparin (LMWH - dalteparin)
Patients at low risk of thrombosis may simply stop warfarin. The need for peri- operative prophylactic dalteparin is determined by the usual VTE risk assessment criteria.