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Evaluation of the Long-Term Impact on Quality After the End of Pharmacist-Driven Warfarin Therapy Management in Patients With Poor Quality of Anticoagulation Therapy.

Authors :
Marcatto, Leiliane Rodrigues
Sacilotto, Luciana
Tavares, Letícia Camargo
Souza, Debora Stephanie Pereira
Olivetti, Natália
Strunz, Celia Maria Cassaro
Darrieux, Francisco Carlos Costa
Scanavacca, Maurício Ibrahim
Krieger, Jose Eduardo
Pereira, Alexandre Costa
Santos, Paulo Caleb Junior Lima
Source :
Frontiers in Pharmacology; 7/14/2020, Vol. 11, p1-7, 7p
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Background: Warfarin is the most common oral anticoagulant drug, especially in low-income and emerging countries, because of the high cost of direct oral anticoagulant (DOACs), or when warfarin is the only proven therapy (mechanical prosthetic valve and kidney dysfunction). The quality of warfarin therapy is directly associated with dose management. Evidence shows that pharmaceutical care achieves a better quality of therapy with warfarin. However, there are no studies showing this intervention in a specific patient group with poor quality of anticoagulation in a long period after the end of the follow-up by a pharmacist. Thus, the aim of this study was to evaluate whether the quality of warfarin therapy driven by a pharmacist remains stable in the long term after the end of follow up with a pharmacist, in AF patients with poor quality of anticoagulation. Methods: This is a prospective study, which evaluated about 2,620 patients and selected 262 patients with AF and poor quality of anticoagulation therapy with warfarin (TTR<50% - based on the last three values of international normalized ratio). Pharmacist-driven therapy management was performed up to 12 weeks. Data from patients were evaluated 1 year after the end of the follow-up with pharmacist. Results: Comparison between mean TTR after 12 weeks of pharmaceutical care (54.1%) and mean TTR one year after the end of the pharmaceutical care (56.5%; p=0.081) did not achieve statistical difference, demonstrating that the increment of quality due to intervention of 12 weeks was maintained for 1 year after intervention. Conclusion: The long-term impact of pharmaceutical care was beneficial for patients with AF and poor quality of warfarin anticoagulation. This design might be an important strategy to treat a subgroup of patients without proven effectiveness of warfarin. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
16639812
Volume :
11
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Frontiers in Pharmacology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
144621000
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3389/fphar.2020.01056