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Erratum to: The Perioperative Anticoagulant Use for Surgery Evaluation (PAUSE) Study for Patients on a Direct Oral Anticoagulant who Need an Elective Surgery or Procedure: Design and Rationale.

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In the Original Article by Douketis et al. "The Perioperative Anticoagulant Use for Surgery Evaluation (PAUSE) Study for Patients on a Direct Oral Anticoagulant who Need an Elective Surgery or… Click to show full abstract

In the Original Article by Douketis et al. "The Perioperative Anticoagulant Use for Surgery Evaluation (PAUSE) Study for Patients on a Direct Oral Anticoagulant who Need an Elective Surgery or Procedure: Design and Rationale (Thromb Haemost 2017;117:2415-2424; DOI: 10.1160/TH17-08-0553), the authors have identified two errors that they wish to correct: First, on page 2419, second paragraph, Clinical Outcomes subheading, the authors state that, "The primary clinical outcomes are arterial thromboembolism, comprising stroke (ischemic or haemorrhagic), systemic embolism or transient ischemic attack and major bleeding. The inclusion of "haemorrhagic stroke is incorrect as only ischemic strokes are included in their definition of an arterial thromboembolism outcome. The definitions of study outcomes are correctly indicated in Appendix A (pg. 2424) of the paper, where the authors state: "The second primary outcome is arterial thromboembolism, comprising (1) ischemic stroke, defined as any new focal neurologic deficit that persists for 24 hours or any new focal neurologic deficit of any duration that occurs with evidence of acute infarction on computed tomography (CT) or magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of the brain; (2) systemic embolism, defined as symptomatic embolism to upper or lower extremity or abdominal organ, confirmed intraoperatively or by objective imaging studies (e.g. CT angiography) and (3) transient ischemic attack, defined as symptomatic focal neurologic deficit (lasting typically 1 hour) that occurs with no evidence of acute infarction on CT/MRI of the brain. Second, the depiction of the pre-procedure interruption interval for dabigatran-treated patientswith a CrCl 50 mL/min is incorrect in Figure 1 (pg. 2418) of the paper, as the arrow should extend so it reflects 2 days off treatment (i.e., day -2 and day -1). The incorrect (currently published) version is shown below, with incorrect area shaded in red: (Figure Presented).

Keywords: surgery; anticoagulant; procedure; perioperative anticoagulant; use surgery; anticoagulant use

Journal Title: Thrombosis and haemostasis
Year Published: 2018

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