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RESEARCH PRODUCT
Management of Oral Anti-Coagulation in Patients with Heart Failure-Insights from the ThrombEVAL Study
Claus JüngerRoland HardtSebastian GöbelHeidrun LamparterChristoph BickelKarl J. LacknerThomas MünzelPhilipp S. WildKarsten KellerMarkus NaglerHugo Ten CateHugo Ten CateRonja SchmitzJürgen H. ProchaskaMeike ColdeweySimon DiestelmeierLisa EggebrechtSven-oliver TröbsMichael LauterbachSören Schwuchow-thonkesubject
MaleAdministration Oralheart failureclinical outcomeED AMERICAN-COLLEGE030204 cardiovascular system & hematologyTHERAPY ANTITHROMBOTIC THERAPYCohort StudiesPhenprocoumon0302 clinical medicinequality of careGermanyProspective Studies030212 general & internal medicineProspective cohort studyAged 80 and overOUTCOMESIncidenceHazard ratioHematologyTreatment OutcomeCohortFemaleCLINICAL-PRACTICE GUIDELINESSINUS RHYTHMmedicine.drugCohort studyRiskmedicine.medical_specialtyDrug-Related Side Effects and Adverse ReactionsHemorrhageWARFARINEJECTION FRACTION03 medical and health sciencesInternal medicinemedicineHumansAdverse effectAgedbusiness.industryWarfarinhealth care modelAnticoagulantsmedicine.diseaseoral anti-coagulationHeart failureATRIAL-FIBRILLATIONPhenprocoumonADVERSE EVENTSbusinessANTICOAGULANT-THERAPYdescription
AbstractPatients with heart failure (HF) are frequently anti-coagulated with vitamin K-antagonists (VKAs). The use of long-acting VKA may be preferable for HF patients due to higher stability of plasma concentrations. However, evidence on phenprocoumon-based oral anti-coagulation (OAC) therapy in HF is scarce. The aim of this study was to assess the impact of the presence of HF on quality of phenprocoumon-based OAC and the subsequent clinical outcome. Quality of OAC therapy and the incidence of adverse events were analysed in a cohort of regular care (n = 2,011) from the multi-centre thrombEVAL study program (NCT01809015) stratified by the presence of HF. To assess the modifiability of outcome, results were compared with data from individuals receiving specialized care for anti-coagulation (n = 760). Overall, the sample comprised of 813 individuals with HF and 1,160 subjects without HF in the regular care cohort. Quality of OAC assessed by time in therapeutic range (TTR) was 66.1% (47.8%/82.8%) for patients with HF and 70.6% (52.1%/85.9%) for those without HF (p = 0.0046). Stratification for New York Heart Classification (NYHA)-class demonstrated a lower TTR with higher NYHA classes: TTRNYHA-I 69.6% (49.4%/85.6%), TTRNYHA-II 66.5% (50.1%/82.9%) and TTRNYHA-≥III 61.8% (43.1%/79.9%). This translated into a worse net clinical benefit outcome for HF (hazard ratio [HR] 1.63 [1.31/2.02]; p < 0.0001) and an increased risk of bleeding (HR 1.40 [1.04/1.89]; p = 0.028). Management in a specialized coagulation service resulted in an improvement of all, TTR (∆+12.5% points), anti-coagulation-specific and non-specific outcome of HF individuals. In conclusion, HF is an independent risk factor for low quality of OAC therapy translating into an increased risk for adverse events, which can be mitigated by specialized care.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2018-11-01 |