GI Endoscopy · 1 min read

The Pre-Resection Huddle: Verifying Antithrombotics

Clinical Bottom Line

Medication Class2026 Resection ProtocolClinical Risk Strategy
Aspirin 81mgContinue. DO NOT hold.Risk of stopping aspirin (stent thrombosis) heavily outweighs the minor risk of post-polypectomy mucosal bleeding.
Warfarin (Coumadin)Hold 5-7 days; bridge if massive thrombotic risk (e.g., mechanical mitigation).INR must be documented ≤ 1.5 on the morning of massive resections.
DOACs (Apixaban, Rivaroxaban)Hold strictly 2 to 3 days depending on specific renal clearance.DOAC half-lives are predictable; never bridge due to massive compounded bleeding rates.

Halting the Cascade Before It Starts

The vast majority of lethal complications in ambulatory endoscopy are not driven by intra-procedural technical failures, but by disorganized pre-procedural evaluation. Specifically, executing an unplanned hot snare polypectomy on a patient actively taking Direct Oral Anticoagulants (DOACs) virtually guarantees an emergency room visit for severe delayed lower gastrointestinal hemorrhage.

The Mandatory "Time-Out"

Modern endoscopy suites operate under the WHO-style surgical safety checklist. Before the endoscopist deploys a snare, a hard "Time-Out" must occur where the nursing staff formally verifies the patient's antithrombotic profile. If a 15mm polyp is discovered, but the chart verifies the patient took Apixaban that morning, the resection MUST be aborted. The pathology is thoroughly documented, and the patient must return 4 weeks later after a strictly managed, 3-day DOAC hold. Discarding this safety pause results in massive post-operative pooling of blood in the colon, severely endangering the patient and straining on-call surgical resources.


Clinical guidelines summarized by the Gastroscholar Research Team. Last updated: 2026. This article is intended for physicians.

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