Evaluation of the use of a heparin dose‐response test in dogs to determine the optimal heparin dose during intravascular procedures and assessment of the in vitro heparin response in healthy dogs

Author:

Hellemans A.1ORCID,Devriendt N.1ORCID,Duchateau L.2,Devreese K. M. J.3,De Somer F.45,Bosmans T.1,Mampaey G.1ORCID,Smets P.1

Affiliation:

1. Faculty of Veterinary Medicine Small Animal Department Ghent University Merelbeke Belgium

2. Faculty of Veterinary Medicine Biometrics Research Center Ghent University Merelbeke Belgium

3. Coagulation Laboratory Faculty of Medicine Department of Diagnostic Sciences Ghent University Hospital Ghent University Ghent Belgium

4. Faculty of Medical Sciences Department of Cardiac Surgery Ghent University Ghent Belgium

5. Experimental Research Laboratory of Cardiac Surgery and Circulatory Physiology Faculty of Medical Sciences Ghent University Ghent Belgium

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundNo guidelines for administering and monitoring anticoagulants intraprocedurally are currently available in dogs, despite the prevalence of procedures necessitating systemic anticoagulation with heparin.ObjectivesTo evaluate an activated clotting time (ACT)‐based heparin dose‐response (HDR) test to predict the individual required heparin dose in dogs during intravascular procedures, and to investigate both the in vitro heparin – ACT and in vitro heparin – factor anti‐Xa activity (anti‐Xa) relationships in dogs.MethodsBlood was collected from eight healthy beagles undergoing a cardiac procedure and utilised to establish baseline ACT and for in vitro evaluation. Subsequently, 100 IU/kg heparin was administered intravenously (IV) and ACT was remeasured (HDR test). The required heparin dose for an ACT target response ≥300 s was calculated for each individual and ACT was remeasured after administration of this dose. For in vitro testing, a serial heparin blood dilution (0‐0.5‐1‐2‐4 international unit (IU)/mL) was prepared and ACT and anti‐Xa were determined using whole blood and frozen plasma, respectively.ResultsThe HDR test overestimated the required heparin dose in 3/7 dogs. In vitro, ACT and anti‐Xa increased significantly with increasing blood heparin concentration. Heparin – ACT was nonlinear in 4/8 dogs at heparin concentrations >2 IU/mL, whereas heparin – anti‐Xa remained linear throughout the tested range.ConclusionsThe HDR test poorly estimated the required heparin dose in dogs. This is most likely attributed to a nonlinear heparin – ACT relationship, as observed in vitro. Anti‐Xa is a promising alternative for ACT; however, unavailability as a point‐of‐care test and lack of in vivo target values restrict its current use.

Funder

Fonds Wetenschappelijk Onderzoek

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Veterinary

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