Literature DB >> 15543329

Over-the-counter vitamin K1-containing multivitamin supplements disrupt warfarin anticoagulation in vitamin K1-depleted patients. A prospective, controlled trial.

Daniel Kurnik1, Ronen Loebstein, Hadas Rabinovitz, Naomi Austerweil, Hillel Halkin, Shlomo Almog.   

Abstract

Most multivitamin supplements contain far less vitamin K(1) than thought to affect warfarin anticoagulation. Having described 3 patients with multivitamin-warfarin interactions, we hypothesized that vitamin K(1)-depleted patients are sensitive to even small increments. Therefore, we compared the effect of a vitamin K(1)-containing multivitamin on warfarin anticoagulation between patients with low versus normal vitamin K(1) status. We screened 102 warfarin-treated patients and recruited nine with "low" (< 1.5 mcg/L, 10(th) percentile) (group 1) and 7 with "normal" (>4.5 mcg/L, median) (group 2) total vitamin K(1) plasma levels (vitamin K(1) + vitamin K(1) 2,3-epoxide). Patients received one multivitamin tablet containing 25 mcg of vitamin K(1) daily, for 4 weeks (period 1). A predefined algorithm was used to adjust warfarin doses if the INR was outside the therapeutic range. Patients requiring warfarin increments were then switched to 4 weeks of a vitamin K(1)-free multivitamin supplement (period 2). During period 1, subtherapeutic INRs occurred in 9/9 and 1/7 patients in group 1 and 2, respectively (p <0.001). In group 1, INR decreased by a median of 0.51 (p <0.01), and warfarin dose had to be raised by 5.3% (p <0.01), whereas INR and warfarin dose did not change significantly in group 2. During period 2 (7 patients), there were trends towards decreased total vitamin K(1) and rising INRs associated with significantly lower warfarin doses. We conclude that vitamin K(1)-containing multivitamins reduce INR in patients with low vitamin K(1) status. Our study suggests that vitamin K-depleted patients are sensitive to even small changes in vitamin K(1) intake.

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Year:  2004        PMID: 15543329     DOI: 10.1160/TH04-06-0346

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Thromb Haemost        ISSN: 0340-6245            Impact factor:   5.249


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