Anticoagulation in Pregnancy โ 50 Advanced FAQs (SS / DM Level)
Each FAQ is answered with 5 highโyield, examโoriented points, aligned with ESC, ACC/AHA, RCOG, ACOG, and ASH guidance.
1. Why is LMWH preferred over UFH in pregnancy?
- More predictable pharmacokinetics
- Lower risk of HIT
- Lower osteoporosis risk
- Once or twice daily dosing
- No placental transfer
2. Why are DOACs contraindicated in pregnancy?
- Placental transfer documented
- Fetal bleeding risk
- Lack of randomized safety data
- Animal teratogenicity signals
- Unreliable reversal in pregnancy
3. What defines warfarin embryopathy?
- Nasal hypoplasia
- Stippled epiphyses
- Limb hypoplasia
- Growth restriction
- CNS abnormalities
4. What is the critical teratogenic window for warfarin?
- 6โ12 weeks gestation
- Period of organogenesis
- Doseโdependent risk
- Higher risk >5 mg/day
- Irreversible fetal effects
5. Indications for therapeutic LMWH in pregnancy?
- Acute VTE
- Recurrent prior VTE
- Mechanical heart valves
- LV thrombus
- APS with thrombosis
6. Target antiโXa levels for LMWH?
- Prophylactic: 0.2โ0.6 IU/mL
- Therapeutic: 0.8โ1.2 IU/mL
- Mechanical valve: 1.0โ1.2 IU/mL
- Sample at 4 hours postโdose
- Adjust for weight changes
7. When is antiโXa monitoring mandatory?
- Mechanical heart valves
- Extremes of body weight
- Renal dysfunction
- Recurrent thrombosis
- Breakthrough events
8. Why is postpartum period highest risk for VTE?
- Hypercoagulable rebound
- Venous stasis
- Endothelial injury
- Reduced mobility
- Prothrombotic hormonal milieu
9. Minimum duration of anticoagulation after pregnancyโassociated VTE?
- At least 3 months total
- Mandatory 6 weeks postpartum
- Extend if ongoing risk
- Independent of delivery mode
- Not symptomโbased
10. Management of APS in pregnancy?
- Therapeutic or prophylactic LMWH
- Lowโdose aspirin
- Avoid warfarin antepartum
- Intensify postpartum
- Multidisciplinary care
11. Differences between inherited and acquired thrombophilia in pregnancy?
- APS is acquired
- APS higher obstetric risk
- Inherited forms vary in penetrance
- APS requires aspirin
- Testing affects management
12. Highโrisk inherited thrombophilias?
- Antithrombin deficiency
- Homozygous FVL
- Homozygous prothrombin mutation
- Combined defects
- Prior VTE association
13. Lowโrisk thrombophilias?
- Heterozygous FVL
- Heterozygous prothrombin mutation
- Isolated protein C deficiency
- No prior VTE
- Usually postpartum prophylaxis only
14. Indications for antepartum prophylaxis after prior VTE?
- Unprovoked VTE
- Estrogenโrelated VTE
- Multiple prior events
- Persistent risk factors
- Thrombophilia overlap
15. When is postpartumโonly prophylaxis sufficient?
- Single provoked VTE
- Major transient risk factor
- No thrombophilia
- No family history
- Rapid mobilization
16. Peripartum LMWH discontinuation rules?
- 24 h before planned delivery
- 24 h before neuraxial block
- Earlier if renal impairment
- Switch to UFH if high risk
- Document last dose
17. Why is UFH preferred near delivery?
- Short halfโlife
- Complete reversibility
- IV titratability
- Safe with neuraxial planning
- Rapid postpartum restart
18. Restarting anticoagulation postpartum โ principles?
- Ensure hemostasis
- 6โ12 h after vaginal delivery
- 12โ24 h after Cโsection
- Highโrisk patients earlier
- Continue โฅ6 weeks
19. Breastfeeding and anticoagulants โ key points?
- LMWH safe
- UFH safe
- Warfarin safe
- DOACs not recommended
- No dose adjustment needed
20. Mechanical heart valves โ why are they high risk in pregnancy?
- Hypercoagulable state
- Increased valve thrombosis
- Limited drug options
- Hemodynamic stress
- High maternal mortality
21. Mechanical mitral vs aortic valves โ difference?
- Mitral higher thrombosis risk
- Lower flow velocities
- Larger thrombogenic surface
- More embolic events
- Aggressive anticoagulation needed
22. LMWHโonly strategy in mechanical valves โ limitations?
- Higher thrombosis rates
- Requires strict monitoring
- Dose escalation common
- Breakthrough events reported
- Not suitable for all valves
23. Warfarinโbased strategy in mechanical valves โ advantages?
- Best maternal protection
- Stable INR monitoring
- Lower valve thrombosis
- Familiar management
- Predictable efficacy
24. Criteria allowing cautious warfarin use in pregnancy?
- Dose โค5 mg/day
- Informed consent
- High maternal risk
- Second trimester use
- Specialist supervision
25. Switching strategies across trimesters โ rationale?
- Avoid firstโtrimester teratogenicity
- Optimize maternal safety later
- Balance fetalโmaternal risk
- Timing with organogenesis
- Delivery planning
26. Role of aspirin in pregnancy anticoagulation?
- APS management
- Preeclampsia prevention
- Adjunct, not monotherapy
- Lowโdose only
- Minimal bleeding risk
27. Why is fondaparinux rarely used?
- Limited pregnancy data
- Possible placental passage
- Long halfโlife
- No reversal agent
- Reserved for HIT
28. Heparinโinduced thrombocytopenia in pregnancy โ approach?
- Stop all heparins
- Use fondaparinux or argatroban
- Avoid warfarin initially
- Platelet recovery first
- Specialist care
29. Renal dysfunction and anticoagulation choice?
- Avoid LMWH accumulation
- Prefer UFH
- Monitor aPTT
- Adjust postpartum
- Higher bleeding vigilance
30. Obesity and LMWH dosing challenges?
- Weightโbased dosing mandatory
- AntiโXa monitoring required
- Dose escalation common
- Underโdosing risk
- Dynamic weight changes
31. Underโanticoagulation consequences in pregnancy?
- Recurrent VTE
- Valve thrombosis
- Maternal mortality
- Fetal loss
- Emergency interventions
32. Overโanticoagulation risks in pregnancy?
- Maternal bleeding
- Placental abruption
- Postpartum hemorrhage
- Spinal hematoma
- Surgical complications
33. Anticoagulation in cardiomyopathy with LV thrombus?
- LMWH preferred
- Avoid DOACs
- Continue through pregnancy
- Postpartum transition possible
- Imagingโguided duration
34. AF in pregnancy โ anticoagulation principles?
- CHAโDSโโVASc applies
- LMWH if indicated
- Rate control prioritized
- Rhythm strategy individualized
- Avoid DOACs
35. Pregnancyโrelated physiological changes affecting anticoagulation?
- Increased plasma volume
- Increased renal clearance
- Reduced protein binding
- Hypercoagulability
- Weight gain
36. Why is INR unreliable in pregnancy for nonโwarfarin drugs?
- INR measures vitamin K antagonism
- Heparins do not affect INR
- Physiological INR variation
- Misleading safety signal
- AntiโXa preferred
37. Role of multidisciplinary team (MDT)?
- Cardiology input
- Obstetric planning
- Hematology dosing
- Anesthesia coordination
- Neonatal preparedness
38. Common exam trap regarding anticoagulation in pregnancy?
- Choosing DOACs
- Forgetting postpartum period
- Missing neuraxial timing
- Ignoring mechanical valve risk
- Underestimating APS
39. Why is aspirin alone insufficient for VTE prevention?
- Venous clots are fibrinโrich
- Platelet role limited
- Inadequate efficacy
- No dose escalation benefit
- Only adjunctive role
40. Anticoagulation differences between vaginal and cesarean delivery?
- Higher bleeding with Cโsection
- Delayed restart in surgery
- Same total duration
- Individual hemostasis assessment
- Thrombosis risk persists
41. Why should anticoagulation never be stopped prematurely postpartum?
- Sustained hypercoagulability
- Hormonal withdrawal
- Reduced mobility
- Surgical wounds
- High PE mortality
42. Imaging followโup for pregnancyโassociated VTE?
- Symptomโguided
- Avoid radiation when possible
- Ultrasound preferred
- CT only if essential
- Does not shorten therapy
43. Interaction of preeclampsia and thrombosis risk?
- Endothelial dysfunction
- Increased platelet activation
- Higher VTE incidence
- Aspirin benefit
- Careful bleeding balance
44. Why are bioprosthetic valves preferred in women planning pregnancy?
- No lifelong anticoagulation
- Lower pregnancy risk
- Easier peripartum care
- Reduced fetal exposure
- Acceptable durability
45. Management of breakthrough thrombosis on LMWH?
- Confirm compliance
- Check antiโXa levels
- Increase dose
- Switch strategy if needed
- MDT review
46. Key counseling points before pregnancy in anticoagulated women?
- Maternal risk discussion
- Fetal risk explanation
- Drug switching plan
- Monitoring frequency
- Delivery strategy
47. Why is pregnancy considered a hypercoagulable state?
- Increased clotting factors
- Reduced protein S
- Venous stasis
- Placental thromboplastin
- Evolutionary hemorrhage protection
48. Anticoagulation in assisted reproductive techniques?
- Estrogen increases VTE risk
- Consider prophylactic LMWH
- APS screening important
- Early pregnancy vigilance
- Individual risk assessment
49. Common reasons for anticoagulation failure in pregnancy?
- Underโdosing
- Weight changes
- Missed doses
- Lack of monitoring
- Delayed escalation
50. Single best exam mantra for anticoagulation in pregnancy?
- LMWH is default
- DOACs are wrong
- Postpartum period is critical
- Mechanical valves are highest risk
- MDT care saves lives
concise, guideline-concordant summary of anticoagulation in pregnancy, aligned with major society recommendations (ESC, ACC/AHA, RCOG, ACOG, ASH).
1. Core Principles
- Placental transfer
- Does NOT cross placenta: Unfractionated heparin (UFH), Low-molecular-weight heparin (LMWH)
- Crosses placenta (teratogenic/fetotoxic): Warfarin, DOACs โ contraindicated
- Preferred agents in pregnancy: LMWH > UFH
- Monitoring: Anti-Xa monitoring in selected high-risk situations
2. Anticoagulants: What to Use and Avoid
Recommended
| Drug | Use in Pregnancy |
|---|
| LMWH (Enoxaparin, Dalteparin) | First-line for prophylaxis & treatment |
| UFH | Alternative when rapid reversal needed (near delivery, renal failure) |
Contraindicated
| Drug | Reason |
|---|
| Warfarin | Embryopathy (6โ12 weeks), fetal bleeding |
| DOACs (Apixaban, Rivaroxaban, Dabigatran) | Placental transfer, insufficient safety data |
| Fondaparinux | Limited data; reserve only if HIT with no alternative |
3. Indication-Specific Recommendations
A. Venous Thromboembolism (VTE)
Acute VTE in Pregnancy
- LMWH (therapeutic dose) throughout pregnancy
- Continue minimum 3 months AND at least 6 weeks postpartum
Typical dosing
- Enoxaparin: 1 mg/kg SC twice daily or 1.5 mg/kg once daily
Previous VTE (Secondary Prophylaxis)
| Risk Category | Recommendation |
|---|
| Unprovoked / estrogen-related VTE | Prophylactic or intermediate-dose LMWH |
| Provoked VTE (transient risk) | Postpartum LMWH (6 weeks) |
| Multiple prior VTE | Therapeutic-dose LMWH |
B. Thrombophilia
| Condition | Anticoagulation |
|---|
| Antiphospholipid syndrome (APS) | LMWH + low-dose aspirin |
| High-risk inherited thrombophilia + prior VTE | LMWH antepartum + postpartum |
| Low-risk thrombophilia, no VTE | Usually postpartum only |
C. Mechanical Heart Valves (High-Risk Group)
Options (none ideal; individualize):
- Adjusted-dose LMWH throughout pregnancy (anti-Xa 0.8โ1.2 IU/mL)
- LMWH (1st trimester) โ Warfarin (2ndโearly 3rd trimester) โ LMWH
- Consider warfarin only if dose โค5 mg/day
- UFH IV (less effective, higher thrombosis risk)
Management requires multidisciplinary care (cardiologyโobstetricsโhematology).
D. Atrial Fibrillation / Other Cardiac Indications
- LMWH if anticoagulation required
- DOACs contraindicated
- Warfarin avoided except rare, specialist-guided situations
4. Dosing and Monitoring
LMWH Monitoring
- Not routine
- Check anti-Xa (4 hours post-dose) if:
- Mechanical valves
- Extreme body weight
- Renal dysfunction
- Recurrent thrombosis
Target Anti-Xa
- Prophylactic: 0.2โ0.6 IU/mL
- Therapeutic: 0.8โ1.2 IU/mL
5. Peripartum Management
| Situation | Recommendation |
|---|
| Planned delivery | Stop LMWH 24 h before |
| Neuraxial anesthesia | โฅ12 h (prophylactic) / โฅ24 h (therapeutic) |
| High thrombotic risk | Switch to IV UFH near term |
| Post-delivery restart | 6โ12 h (vaginal), 12โ24 h (C-section) |
6. Postpartum Anticoagulation
- Highest VTE risk period
- Continue anticoagulation for โฅ6 weeks
- Warfarin safe in breastfeeding
- LMWH safe in breastfeeding
- DOACs not recommended during breastfeeding
7. Key Take-Home Messages
- LMWH is the anticoagulant of choice in pregnancy
- Warfarin and DOACs are contraindicated
- Mechanical valves = highest risk โ individualized strategy
- Postpartum period requires mandatory protection
Pregnant patient โ Need for anticoagulation?
โฌ๏ธ
Step 1: Indication
- Acute VTE
- Prior VTE
- Thrombophilia
- Mechanical valve
- AF / cardiomyopathy
โฌ๏ธ
Step 2: Drug Selection
- LMWH โ First-line
- UFH โ If near delivery / renal failure
- โ Warfarin / DOACs โ Avoid
โฌ๏ธ
Step 3: Dose Strategy
- Prophylactic / Intermediate / Therapeutic
- Weight-based dosing
- Anti-Xa monitoring if high risk
โฌ๏ธ
Step 4: Peripartum Planning
- Stop LMWH 24 h pre-delivery
- Consider UFH switch if very high risk
- Neuraxial timing respected
โฌ๏ธ
Step 5: Postpartum
- Restart anticoagulation early
- Continue โฅ6 weeks
- Warfarin or LMWH acceptable during breastfeeding
II. DRUG SELECTION TABLE (CORE GUIDELINES)
| Drug | Placenta | Use in Pregnancy |
|---|
| LMWH | โ | First-line |
| UFH | โ | Alternative |
| Warfarin | โ
| Contraindicated (except selected valve cases) |
| DOACs | โ
| Contraindicated |
| Fondaparinux | Minimal | Only if HIT |
III. LMWH DOSING TABLE (WEIGHT-BASED)
Therapeutic Anticoagulation
| Drug | Dose |
|---|
| Enoxaparin | 1 mg/kg SC 12-hourly |
| Dalteparin | 100 IU/kg 12-hourly |
Prophylactic Anticoagulation
| Weight | Enoxaparin |
|---|
| <50 kg | 20 mg OD |
| 50โ90 kg | 40 mg OD |
| 91โ130 kg | 60 mg OD |
| >130 kg | 80 mg OD |
IV. ANTI-Xa MONITORING (ADVANCED POINT)
| Situation | Target Anti-Xa (4 h post-dose) |
|---|
| Prophylactic | 0.2โ0.6 IU/mL |
| Therapeutic | 0.8โ1.2 IU/mL |
| Mechanical valve | 1.0โ1.2 IU/mL |
Indications for monitoring
- Mechanical valves
- Extremes of body weight
- Renal dysfunction
- Recurrent thrombosis
V. INDICATION-WISE GUIDELINES
A. Acute VTE in Pregnancy
- Therapeutic LMWH throughout pregnancy
- Minimum 3 months total
- โฅ6 weeks postpartum mandatory
B. Previous VTE
| Risk Profile | Strategy |
|---|
| Unprovoked / estrogen-related | Antepartum + postpartum LMWH |
| Provoked (transient risk) | Postpartum LMWH only |
| Multiple VTE | Therapeutic LMWH |
C. Thrombophilia
| Condition | Management |
|---|
| APS | LMWH + low-dose aspirin |
| High-risk inherited thrombophilia + VTE | Antepartum + postpartum LMWH |
| Low-risk, no VTE | Usually postpartum only |
D. Mechanical Heart Valves (MOST EXAMINED)
Accepted Strategies
| Strategy | Pros | Cons |
|---|
| LMWH throughout | Fetal safety | Valve thrombosis risk |
| LMWH โ Warfarin โ LMWH | Best efficacy | Teratogenicity |
| UFH | Reversible | Inferior protection |
Warfarin may be considered ONLY if dose โค5 mg/day and after shared decision-making.
E. AF / Cardiomyopathy
- LMWH if CHAโDSโ-VASc warrants anticoagulation
- DOACs contraindicated
- Warfarin avoided unless specialist-guided
VI. PERIPARTUM ANTICOAGULATION TABLE
| Scenario | Recommendation |
|---|
| Planned delivery | Stop LMWH 24 h before |
| Neuraxial anesthesia | โฅ12 h (prophylactic), โฅ24 h (therapeutic) |
| Very high thrombotic risk | Switch to IV UFH |
| Restart after delivery | 6โ12 h (vaginal), 12โ24 h (C-section) |
VII. POSTPARTUM & BREASTFEEDING
| Drug | Breastfeeding |
|---|
| LMWH | Safe |
| UFH | Safe |
| Warfarin | Safe |
| DOACs | Not recommended |
Postpartum anticoagulation = โฅ6 weeks (highest VTE risk period).
VIII. MECHANICAL VALVE PREGNANCY DECISION MATRIX (HIGH-YIELD)
| Valve Type | Preferred Strategy |
|---|
| Mitral mechanical | Warfarin-based strategy preferred |
| Aortic bileaflet | LMWH possible with strict monitoring |
| Prior valve thrombosis | Avoid LMWH-only strategy |
Anticoagulation in Pregnancy โ 40 Interactive MCQs