| Literature DB >> 27303213 |
Jeff R Schein1, C Michael White2, Winnie W Nelson1, Jeffrey Kluger3, Elizabeth S Mearns4, Craig I Coleman2.
Abstract
Vitamin K antagonists (VKAs) are effective oral anticoagulants that are titrated to a narrow therapeutic international normalized ratio (INR) range. We reviewed published literature assessing the impact of INR stability - getting into and staying in target INR range - on outcomes including thrombotic events, major bleeding, and treatment costs, as well as key factors that impact INR stability. A time in therapeutic range (TTR) of ≥65 % is commonly accepted as the definition of INR stability. In the real-world setting, this is seldom achieved with standard-of-care management, thus increasing the patients' risks of thrombotic or major bleeding events. There are many factors associated with poor INR control. Being treated in community settings, newly initiated on a VKA, younger in age, or nonadherent to therapy, as well as having polymorphisms of CYP2C9 or VKORC1, or multiple physical or mental co-morbid disease states have been associated with lower TTR. Clinical prediction tools are available, though they can only explain <10 % of the variance behind poor INR control. Clinicians caring for patients who require anticoagulation are encouraged to intensify diligence in INR management when using VKAs and to consider appropriate use of newer anticoagulants as a therapeutic option.Entities:
Keywords: Anticoagulation; Atrial fibrillation; International normalized ratio; Venous thromboembolism; Vitamin K antagonists
Year: 2016 PMID: 27303213 PMCID: PMC4906845 DOI: 10.1186/s12959-016-0088-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Thromb J ISSN: 1477-9560
Mean time in the therapeutic range observed in recent atrial fibrillation and venous thromboembolism randomized controlled trials of novel target oral anticoagulants
| Study | Disease state | Mean TTR | TTR in month 1a | TTR in later monthsa |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| ARISTOTLE | NVAF | 62 % | ||
| ENGAGE-TIMI-48 2013 | NVAF | 65 % | ||
| RE-LY 2009 | NVAF | 64 % | ||
| ROCKET-AF, 2010 | NVAF | 55 % | ||
| AMPLIFY | VTE | 61 % | NR | NR |
| EINSTEIN-DVT | DVT | 58 % | 54 % | 66 % (month 10) |
| EINSTEIN-PE | PE | 63 % | 58 % | 73 % (month 11) |
| Hokusai-VTE | VTE | 64 % | NR | NR |
| RECOVER 1 | VTE | 60 % | 53 % | 66 % (month 6) |
| RECOVER 2 | VTE | 57 % | 51 % | 54–62 % (months 3–6) |
DVT deep vein thrombosis, NR not reported, NVAF nonvalvular atrial fibrillation, PE pulmonary embolism, TTR time in the therapeutic range, VTE venous thromboembolism
aFor venous thromboembolism studies only
Fig. 1Percent of patients with ≥1 INRs outside the normal therapeutic range. This figure displays the % of people in an analysis [34] of the CoagCheckTM database with at least one INR value outside of the normal therapeutic range with blue boxes showing the percent of patients who were either below 2.0 (90 %) or above 3.0 (82 %). The red, green, purple, and orange boxes display the percent of people who ever achieved a level of 3.0–4.0, 4.0–5.0, 5.0–6.0, and >6.0, respectively. The same individual could be represented in multiple categories given their INRs achieved over time including being below 2.0 and above 3.0
Results of meta-analyses evaluating the international normalized ratio stability in atrial fibrillation or venous thromboembolism patients
| Meta-Analysis, Year | Population | TTR, % (95 % CI) | TBR, % (95 % CI) | TAR, % (95 % CI) | PINRR, % (95 % CI) | PINRBR, % (95 % CI) | PINRAR, % (95 % CI) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mearns 2014 | AF | 61 (59 to 62) | 25 (23 to 27) | 14 (13 to 15) | 59 (53 to 59) | 26 (23 to 29) | 13 (11 to 17) |
| Mearns 2014 | VTE | 61 (59 to 63) | 25 (23 to 26) | 15 (14 to 17) | 59 (54 to 64) | 26 (23 to 29) | 13 (9 to 19) |
| Erkens 2012 (Month 1) | VTE | 54 (NR) | 42 (NR) | 12 (NR) | NR | NR | NR |
| Erkens 2012 (Months 1–3) | 56 (NR) | 35 (NR) | 19 (NR) | NR | NR | NR | |
| Erkens 2012 (Month 1–6+) | 60 (NR) | 24 (NR) | 17 (NR) | NR | NR | NR | |
| Erkens 2012 (Month 4–12+) | 75 (NR) | 21 (NR) | 12 (NR) | NR | NR | NR | |
| Wan 2008 (RCT) | AF | 67 (44 to 73) | 20 (18 t to 40) | 14 (9 to 17) | 67 (48 to 84) | 24 (14 to 32) | 8 (2 to 24) |
| Wan 2008 (Prospective) | 61 (56 to 66) | 21 (14 to 29) | 14 (13 to 30) | --- | --- | --- | |
| Wan 2008 (Retrospective) | 59 (29 to 75) | 25 (9 to 52) | 14 (9 to 39) | 53 (34 to 68) | 26 (10 to 51) | 17 (14 to 29) | |
| Cios 2009 | AF | 59 (57 to 61) | NR | NR | NR | NR | NR |
| Reynolds 2004 | AF | 61 (NR) | 26 (NR) | 13 (NR) | 61 (NR) | 25 (NR) | 14 (NR) |
AF atrial fibrillation, CI confidence interval, NR not reported, PINRAR proportion of INRs above range, PINRBR proportion of INRs below range, PINRR proportion of INRs in range; RCT randomized controlled trial, TAR time above range, TBR time below range, TTR time in range, VTE venous thromboembolism
--- = evaluated, but no data
Fig. 2Risks of adverse outcomes for people with INRs <2.0 or >3.0. Adapted from data from an observational study using the Veterans Health Administration dataset [38] showing the relative risk (RR) of adverse thrombotic or embolic events in patients with subtherapeutic INRs versus normal INRs and then major bleeding vents with supertherapeutic INRs versus normal INRs. The diamond represents the actual RR with the line representing the 95 % confidence interval and the blue dashed line representing a RR of 1.0, where the risk of outcomes would have been the same as those with normal INRs
Fig. 3Costs Associated with In Range and Out of Range INRs. Adapted from data from a US Veterans Administration dataset [46] where the total costs are displayed in blue and the constituent costs of inpatient, outpatient, and outpatient pharmacy costs are in red, green, and purple, respectively. The total costs in the therapeutic INR group is significantly lower than those with abnormally low or high INR groups. Note that the highest costs were associated with suboptimal INR values (i.e., INR <2.0)
Summative assessment of factors shown to positively or negatively impact INR stability
| Factor | Data source | Significant factors the impact INR stability |
|---|---|---|
| Poorer INR Stability | ||
| VKA Use in Community Setting vs. Anticoagulation Clinic | Meta-Regression | ↓ TTR by 7.1 to 7.2 % |
| VKA Naïve vs. VKA-Experienced | Meta-Regression | ↓ TTR by 5.3 % |
| Heart Failure | Multivariate Analysis | OR 1.41 for TTR Instability |
| Diabetes Mellitus | Multivariate Analysis | OR 1.28 for TTR Instability |
| Stroke History | Multivariate Analysis | OR 1.15 for TTR Instability |
| Higher CHADS2 Score | Multivariate Analysis | ↓ TTR by 7.6 % (SAMe-TT2R2) |
| Female Gender | Multivariate Analysis | ↓ TTR by 6.0 % (SAMe-TT2R2) |
| Younger Age | Multivariate Analysis | ↓ TTR by 20.3 % Age <50 (SAMe-TT2R2) |
| ↓ TTR by 7.7 % Age 50–60 (SAMe-TT2R2) | ||
| Minority Status | Multivariate Analysis | ↓ TTR by 18.5 % (SAMe-TT2R2) |
| Smoking | Multivariate Analysis | ↓ TTR by 10.8 % (SAMe-TT2R2) |
| Amiodarone Use | Multivariate Analysis | ↓ TTR by 7.7 % (SAMe-TT2R2) |
| Better INR Stability | ||
| VKA Self Management vs. No Self Management | Meta-Regression | ↑ TTR by 7.0 % |
| European/United Kingdom Treatment vs. Elsewhere | Meta-Regression | ↑ TTR by 9.7 % |
| Non-Warfarin VKAs vs. Warfarin | Meta-Regression | ↑ TTR by 9.2 % |
| Male Gender | Multivariate Analysis | OR 0.78 for TTR Instability |
| Hypertension | Multivariate Analysis | OR 0.86 for TTR Instability |
| Beta-Blocker Use | Multivariate Analysis | ↑TTR by 4.8 % (SAMe-TT2R2) |
| Verapamil Use | Multivariate Analysis | ↑ TTR by 6.3 % (SAMe-TT2R2) |
OR Odds Ratio, TTR Time in Therapeutic Range, VKA Vitamin K Antagonist
SAMe-TT2R2 scoring system and implications
| Criteria | One point | Two points | Points |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sex | Female gender | 1 | |
| Age | Age < 60 years old | 1 | |
| Medical history | Two or more co-morbidities: | 1 | |
| Treatment | Treatment with amiodarone | 1 | |
| Tobacco | Tobacco use in the past 2 years | 2 | |
| Race | Non-Caucasian race | 2 | |
| Maximum points | 8 |
The SAMe-TT2R2 score allows an initial patient assessment to discern who is unlikely to achieve a TTR ≥65 %. Patients that score ≥ 2 have reduces odds of achieving TTR ≥65 %. It does not include the risk associated with instability after initiation, only the ability to achieve longer term control [17]