Warfarin necrosis

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Warfarin necrosis
Coumarin-induced skin necrosis.jpg
Examples of coumadin-induced skin necrosis, late (left) and early (right) in the disease course.
Classification and external resources
Specialty Lua error in Module:Wikidata at line 446: attempt to index field 'wikibase' (a nil value).
ICD-10 Y44.2
ICD-9-CM E934.2
Patient UK Warfarin necrosis
[[[d:Lua error in Module:Wikidata at line 863: attempt to index field 'wikibase' (a nil value).|edit on Wikidata]]]

Warfarin-induced skin necrosis (or, more generally, coumadin-induced skin necrosis or Anticoagulant-induced skin necrosis) is a condition in which skin and subcutaneous tissue necrosis (tissue death) occurs due to acquired protein C deficiency following treatment with anti-vitamin K anticoagulants (coumadins, such as warfarin).[1]

Warfarin necrosis is a rare but severe complication of treatment with warfarin or related anticoagulants.[2] The typical patient appears to be an obese, middle aged woman (median age 54 years, male to female ratio 1:3).[1][3]:122-3 This drug eruption usually occurs between the third and tenth days of therapy with warfarin derivatives.[1] The first symptoms are pain and redness in the affected area. As they progress, lesions develop a sharp border and become petechial, then hard and purpuric. They may then resolve or progress to form large, irregular, bloody bullae with eventual necrosis and slow-healing eschar formation. Favored sites are breasts, thighs, buttocks and penis,[1] all areas with subcutaneous fat.[3]:122 In rare cases, the fascia and muscle are involved.[4]

Development of the syndrome is associated with the use of large loading doses at the start of treatment.[5]

Disease mechanism

The coagulation cascade.

Warfarin necrosis usually occurs three to five days after drug therapy is begun, and a high initial dose increases the risk of its development.[3]:122 Heparin-induced necrosis can develop both at sites of local injection and - when infused intravenously - in a widespread pattern.[3]:123

In warfarin's initial stages of action, inhibition of protein C and Factor VII is stronger than inhibition of the other vitamin K-dependent coagulation factors II, IX and X. This results from the fact that these proteins have different half-lives: 1.5 to six hours for factor VII and eight hours for protein C, versus one day for factor IX, two days for factor X and two to five days for factor II. The larger the initial dose of vitamin K-antagonist, the more pronounced these differences are. This coagulation factor imbalance leads to paradoxical activation of coagulation, resulting in a hypercoagulable state and thrombosis. The blood clots interrupt the blood supply to the skin, causing necrosis. Protein C is an innate anticoagulant, and as warfarin further decreases protein C levels, it can lead to massive thrombosis with necrosis and gangrene of limbs.

Notably, the prothrombin time (or international normalized ratio, INR) used to test the effect of coumadins is highly dependent on factor VII, which explains why patients can have a therapeutic INR (indicating good anticoagulant effect) but still be in a hypercoagulable state.[1]

In one third of cases, warfarin necrosis occurs in patients with an underlying, innate and previously unknown deficiency of protein C. The condition is related to purpura fulminans, a complication in infants with sepsis (blood stream infection) which also involves skin necrosis. These infants often have protein C deficiency as well. There have also been cases in patients with other deficiency, including protein S deficiency,[6][7] activated protein C resistance (Factor V Leiden)[8] and antithrombin III deficiency.[9]

Although the above theory is the most commonly accepted theory, others believe that it is a hypersensitivity reaction or a direct toxic effect.[1]

Treatment and prevention

The first element of treatment is usually to discontinue the offending drug, although there have been reports describing how the eruption evolved little after it had established in spite of continuing the medication.[10][11] Vitamin K can be used to reverse the effects of coumadins, and heparin or its low molecular weight heparin (LMWH) can be used in an attempt to prevent further clotting. None of these suggested therapies have been studied in clinical trials.

Heparin and LMWH act by a different mechanism than warfarin, so these drugs can also be used to prevent clotting during the first few days of warfarin therapy and thus prevent warfarin necrosis (this is called 'bridging').

Because low levels of protein C are involved in the underlying mechanism, fresh frozen plasma or pure activated protein C has been used in this setting.[12]

The necrotic skin areas are treated as in other conditions, sometimes healing spontaneously with or without scarring, sometimes going on to require surgical debridement or skin grafting.[1] The risk of death is mainly related to underlying disorders for which anticoagulation is started (for example, recurrent pulmonary embolism).

Since the clot-promoting effects of coumadins are transitory, patients with protein C deficiency or previous warfarin necrosis can still be restarted on these drugs if appropriate measures are taken.[13] These include gradual increase starting from low doses and supplemental administration of protein C (pure or from fresh frozen plasma).[14]

Differential diagnosis

Many conditions mimic or may be mistaken for warfarin necrosis, including pyoderma gangrenosum or necrotizing fasciitis. Warfarin necrosis is also different from another drug eruption associated with warfarin, purple toe syndrome, which usually occurs three to eight weeks after the start of anticoagulation therapy. No report has described this disorder in the immediate postpartum period in patients with protein S deficiency.[15]

History

While skin necrosis in patients had been previously described, Verhagen was the first to publish a paper on this relationship in the medical literature, in 1954.[11]

See also

References

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  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 James, William; Berger, Timothy; Elston, Dirk (2005). Andrews' Diseases of the Skin: Clinical Dermatology. (10th ed.). Saunders. ISBN 0-7216-2921-0.
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