Lupus
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Catastrophic antiphospholipid syndrome is the most severe complication of antiphospholipid syndrome. Vitamin K antagonists are the reference treatment for preventing relapsing thrombotic complications in patients with antiphospholipid syndrome. Direct oral anticoagulants are nonetheless sometimes used in this setting. ⋯ The first patient, who had had a previous thrombotic event, had multiorgan failure 3 days after vitamin K antagonists was replaced by rivaroxaban, and the second developed a similar clinical presentation 7 days after introduction of the same treatment. Both catastrophic antiphospholipid syndrome episodes were successfully treated with heparin followed by vitamin K antagonists, corticosteroids, and plasmapheresis. These two cases highlight for the inefficacy of rivaroxaban preventing severe thrombotic events such as catastrophic antiphospholipid syndrome and thus provide further support for recommendations that vitamin K antagonists must remain the reference anticoagulant in patients with triple-positive antiphospholipid antibodies.