Compare Hold / bridge / restart thresholds for Anticoagulation (peri-operative) across NICE, BSHT, and ESAIC. Built for Adults. Setting: Secondary. Urgency: Routine.
Clear thresholds help clinicians answer "when do I act?" for anticoagulation (peri-operative), aligning expectations between NICE, BSHT, and ESAIC. Use this side-by-side view to decide when to refer, escalate, monitor, or initiate treatment.
Peri-operative anticoagulation management affects approximately 1 in 50 patients undergoing surgery annually in the UK, making this one of the most common clinical challenges in preoperative assessment. The key clinical dilemma involves balancing thrombotic risk against bleeding risk - interrupting anticoagulation too aggressively increases stroke and VTE risk, while insufficient interruption raises surgical bleeding complications.
Approximately 10-15% of surgical patients require formal anticoagulation interruption protocols. Getting these thresholds wrong can lead to serious harm: insufficient interruption causes major bleeding in 3-5% of cases, while excessive interruption increases thrombotic events by 2-4 fold. The mortality difference between optimal and poor management approaches 1-2% in high-risk populations.
NICE provides a comprehensive evidence-based approach focusing on standardized risk assessment, BSHT emphasizes individualized haematological risk stratification with specialist input, while ESAIC contributes the anaesthetist's perspective on practical peri-operative management and bleeding complications. Understanding these philosophical differences helps clinicians determine which guidance best suits their patient population and clinical setting.
| Guideline body | Primary focus | Typical setting | Publication date |
|---|---|---|---|
| NICE | Comprehensive evidence-based standards for NHS practice | Primary and Secondary care | 2024 (NG240) |
| BSHT | Haematology specialist perspective with bleeding/thrombosis focus | Secondary care with haematology input | 2025 |
| ESAIC | Anaesthesia and peri-operative medicine perspective | Secondary care peri-operative setting | 2025 |
Practical implications: Use NICE as the default standard for most secondary care patients, particularly when following standardized pathways. BSHT provides crucial input for complex haematological cases or when specialist review is available. ESAIC guides practical anaesthesia decisions and immediate peri-operative management. Cross-reference between guidelines when managing high-risk patients or when local protocols incorporate multiple perspectives.
| Guideline body | Position | Population & urgency |
|---|---|---|
| NICE | Position on Hold / bridge / restart thresholds for Anticoagulation (peri-operative) | Adults | Urgency: Routine | Setting: Secondary |
| BSHT | Position on Hold / bridge / restart thresholds for Anticoagulation (peri-operative) | Adults | Urgency: Routine | Setting: Secondary |
| ESAIC | Position on Hold / bridge / restart thresholds for Anticoagulation (peri-operative) | Adults | Urgency: Routine | Setting: Secondary |
| Threshold parameter | NICE | BSHT | ESAIC | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| DOAC interruption pre-op | 48 hours (standard risk) 72-96 hours (high bleed risk) |
Individualized 48-96 hours based on CrCl and drug | 24-48 hours for most procedures | CrCl <30ml/min requires longer interruption |
| Warfarin interruption pre-op | 5 days before surgery | 4-5 days with INR monitoring | 5 days with bridging assessment | Target INR <1.5 for surgery |
| Bridging heparin start | 36 hours after last DOAC dose | 24 hours after last DOAC dose | 12-24 hours based on procedure bleed risk | LMWH preferred over UFH where possible |
| Bridging heparin stop | 24 hours pre-op (LMWH) 4-6 hours pre-op (UFH) |
12-24 hours pre-op (LMWH) | 12 hours pre-op for most surgeries | Neuraxial anaesthesia requires longer intervals |
| Restart timing post-op | 48-72 hours after surgery | 24-48 hours if bleeding controlled | 24 hours for most procedures | Assess drain output and haemostasis |
NICE Approach: NICE recommends structured monitoring intervals beginning 7 days preoperatively. Assess bleeding and thrombotic risk using validated tools at initial assessment, repeat risk assessment 48 hours pre-op, and conduct final checks 24 hours before surgery. Postoperatively, monitor haemostasis every 12 hours for 48 hours, then transition to daily assessment. Special populations: elderly patients require more frequent INR checks (every 48 hours during warfarin interruption), while renal impairment patients need daily CrCl assessment during DOAC interruption.
BSHT Approach: BSHT emphasizes continuous risk assessment rather than fixed intervals. Begin monitoring 10-14 days preoperatively for complex cases. Key differences from NICE include daily thrombotic risk reassessment during interruption and more frequent bleeding parameter checks (every 6-8 hours postoperatively in high-risk patients). BSHT uniquely recommends platelet function testing in patients on antiplatelet combinations and suggests D-dimer trending during interruption for high thrombotic risk patients.
ESAIC Approach: ESAIC focuses on intensive peri-operative monitoring with anaesthesia-specific triggers. Monitoring begins 24-48 hours preoperatively with emphasis on point-of-care coagulation testing. Key differences: ESAIC recommends thromboelastography (TEG) or rotational thromboelastometry (ROTEM) for major surgery, suggests 4-hourly neurological assessments during bridging therapy for mechanical heart valve patients, and mandates 2-hourly surgical site checks postoperatively. ESAIC uniquely incorporates temperature and acid-base status into bleeding risk assessment.
| Trigger parameter | NICE action | BSHT action | ESAIC action |
|---|---|---|---|
| INR >1.8 pre-op | Delay surgery >24 hours | Consider vitamin K, discuss with haematology | Proceed if bleeding risk low, use reversal agents if needed |
| CrCl <30ml/min | Refer to renal team | Mandatory haematology review | Anaesthesia review for drug choice |
| Recent stroke/TIA (<3 months) | Discuss with stroke team | Urgent haematology input | Proceed with bridging, intensive monitoring |
| High bleed risk surgery | Multidisciplinary team discussion | Haematology led management | Anaesthesia and surgical co-management |
| Dual antiplatelet therapy | Cardiology consultation | Haematology and cardiology joint decision | Proceed with single antiplatelet, monitor bleeding |
| Mechanical mitral valve | Cardiology and haematology input | Mandatory inpatient bridging | Early restart post-op (12-24 hours) |
| Post-op bleeding with drain output >200ml/hour | Surgical review, consider re-exploration | Haematology for coagulation support | Anaesthesia for haemodynamic management |
Patient: 78-year-old female with paroxysmal AF on apixaban, CrCl 35ml/min, scheduled for elective total hip replacement. CHA₂DS₂-VASc 4, HAS-BLED 2.
Analysis: NICE would recommend apixaban interruption 48 hours pre-op (standard risk), LMWH bridging starting 36 hours after last dose, stopping 24 hours pre-op, restarting 48-72 hours post-op. BSHT would individualize with possible 72-hour interruption given borderline renal function, earlier bridging (24 hours), and consider earlier restart (24 hours) if bleeding controlled. ESAIC would opt for 24-hour interruption with aggressive bridging and aim for 24-hour restart. The NICE approach provides the safest balance for this elderly patient with moderate renal impairment.
Patient: 45-year-old male with mechanical mitral valve on warfarin (INR 2.8) requiring emergency laparotomy for perforated diverticulitis.
Analysis: NICE recommends delay if possible, vitamin K reversal, and discuss with cardiology/haematology. BSHT mandates immediate haematology input for prothrombin complex concentrate (PCC) reversal and inpatient bridging. ESAIC focuses on immediate reversal with PCC, proceeding to surgery with anaesthesia managing bleeding risk, and early postoperative restart. The ESAIC approach is most appropriate for this emergency scenario where surgical delay carries greater risk than bleeding complications.
Several validated tools assist peri-operative anticoagulation decisions. The CHA₂DS₂-VASc score predicts stroke risk during interruption - all three bodies recommend using this for thrombotic risk assessment. NICE emphasizes the HAS-BLED score for bleeding risk prediction, while BSHT prefers the ORBIT score for major bleeding risk. ESAIC incorporates the Surgical APGAR score for intraoperative bleeding risk assessment.
For practical application: Calculate CHA₂DS₂-VASc during preoperative assessment - scores ≥4 suggest higher thrombotic risk during interruption. Use HAS-BLED scores ≥3 to identify patients requiring more cautious interruption protocols. The ORBIT score provides additional granularity for major bleeding prediction, particularly useful when BSHT guidance is followed. ESAIC's use of Surgical APGAR helps anaesthetists make real-time decisions about reversal and restart timing.
Refer to the full guidelines for exact wording and local adaptations. This summary is for rapid orientation and multidisciplinary alignment.