How should warfarin therapy be managed in patients requiring long-term anticoagulation?
Patients with atrial fibrillation at risk of stroke, recurrent venous thrombosis, or prosthetic heart valves
Warfarin therapy management including patient education, age-adjusted starting protocols, and regular monitoring (including self-monitoring)
Successful warfarin management requires comprehensive patient education, age-adjusted initiation protocols, and regular monitoring, with self-monitoring showing improved outcomes.
Long-term treatment with warfarin is recommended for patients with atrial fibrillation at risk of stroke and those with recurrent venous thrombosis or prosthetic heart valves. Patient education before commencing warfarin - regarding signs and symptoms of bleeding, the impact of diet, potential drug interactions and the actions to take if a dose is missed - is pivotal to successful use. Scoring systems such as the CHADS2 score are used to determine if patients with atrial fibrillation are suitable for warfarin treatment. To rapidly achieve stable anticoagulation, use an age-adjusted protocol for starting warfarin. Regular monitoring of the anticoagulant effect is required. Evidence suggests that patients who self-monitor using point-of-care testing have better outcomes than other patients.
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Philip Tideman
South Australia Pathology
Rosy Tirimacco
Royal Australian College of General Practitioners
Andrew St John
Tamil Nadu Government Multi Super Speciality Hospital
Australian Prescriber
Flinders Medical Centre
Women's and Children's Health Network
WA Country Health Service
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Tideman et al. (Tue,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69dcd9c5c099bcfdbb133e89 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.18773/austprescr.2015.016
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