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Open AccessResearch article

Quality of anticoagulation and use of warfarin-interacting medications in long-term care: A chart review

Madeleine Verhovsek1 email, Bahareh Motlagh1 email, Mark A Crowther1 email, Courtney Kennedy1 email, Lisa Dolovich1 email, Glenda Campbell2 email, Luqi Wang3 email and Alexandra Papaioannou1 email

1McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada

2Medical Pharmacies Group Inc., Pickering, Ontario, Canada

3St. Joseph's Healthcare, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada

author email corresponding author email

BMC Geriatrics 2008, 8:13doi:10.1186/1471-2318-8-13

Published: 3 July 2008

Abstract

Background

Maintenance of therapeutic International Normalized Ratio (INR) in the community is generally poor. The supervised environment in long-term care facilities may represent a more ideal setting for warfarin therapy since laboratory monitoring, compliance, dose adjustment, and interacting medications can all be monitored and controlled. The objectives of this study were to determine how effectively warfarin was administered to a cohort of residents in long-term care facilities, to identify the proportion of residents prescribed warfarin-interacting drugs and to ascertain factors associated with poor INR control.

Methods

A chart review of 105 residents receiving warfarin therapy in five long-term care facilities in Hamilton, Ontario was performed. Data were collected on INR levels, warfarin prescribing and monitoring practices, and use of interacting medications.

Results

Over a 12 month period (28,555 resident-days, 78.2 resident years) 3065 INR values were available. Residents were within, below and above the therapeutic range 54%, 35% and 11% of the time, respectively. Seventy-nine percent of residents were prescribed at least one warfarin-interacting medication during the period in review. Residents receiving interacting medications spent less time in the therapeutic range (53.0% vs. 58.2%, OR = 0.93, 95% confidence interval 0.88 to 0.97, P = 0.002). Adequacy of anticoagulation varied significantly between physicians (time in therapeutic range 45.9 to 63.9%).

Conclusion

In this group of long-term care residents, warfarin control was suboptimal. Both prescriber and co-prescription of interacting medications were associated with poorer INR control. Future studies should seek strategies to improve prescriber skill and decrease use of interacting medications.


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