1. Initiation of warfarin therapy: comparison of physician dosing with computer-assisted dosing.
- Author
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White, R H, Hong, R, Venook, A P, Daschbach, M M, Murray, W, Mungall, D R, and Coleman, R W
- Subjects
DRUG therapy ,COMPARATIVE studies ,LONGITUDINAL method ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL cooperation ,COMPUTERS in medicine ,PHYSICIANS ,RESEARCH ,STATISTICAL sampling ,THERAPEUTICS ,TIME ,WARFARIN ,EVALUATION research ,RANDOMIZED controlled trials ,PROTHROMBIN time - Abstract
In a prospective, randomized study at two university hospitals, the authors examined how effectively housestaff physicians (n = 36) managed the initiation of warfarin therapy compared with a computer-assisted dosing regimen (n = 39) using the software program Warfcalc, which was managed by one of the authors. Target prothrombin time ratios were selected by the physicians. Study endpoints included: the time to reach a therapeutic prothrombin ratio, the time to reach a stable therapeutic dose, the number of patients transiently overanticoagulated, the number of bleeding complications, and the accuracy of the predicted maintenance dose, which was assessed at steady-state 10-14 days later. Computer-assisted dosing consistently out-performed the physicians: a stable therapeutic dose was achieved 3.7 days earlier (p = 0.002), fewer patients were overanticoagulated (10% versus 41%), and the predicted maintenance dose was in the therapeutic range in 85% of the computer-dosed patients versus 42% of the physician group (p less than 0.002). For physicians who did not routinely manage warfarin therapy, computer-assisted dosing improved the accuracy of dosing and shortened the time required to achieve a stable therapeutic dose. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1987
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