Determinants for under- and overdosing of direct oral anticoagulants and
physicians' implementation of clinical pharmacists' recommendations
Abstract
Aim: To analyze the appropriateness of DOAC dosing and determinants for
under-and overdosing as well as acceptance and implementation rates of
interventions by clinical pharmacists. Methods: Cross-sectional study
from January 2019-December 2019 in a tertiary hospital in hospitalized
patients with atrial fibrillation on DOACs (n=1688). Primary outcome was
the proportion of patients with inappropriate DOAC prescribing with
identification of determinants for under-and overdosing. Secondary
outcomes included acceptance and implementation rates of pharmacists’
advices and determination of reasons for
non-acceptance/non-implementation. Results: In 16.9% of patients,
inappropriate prescribing was observed. For all DOACs considered
together, body weight<60 kg(OR 0.46 [0.27-0.77]), edoxaban
use(OR 0.42 [0.24-0.74]), undergoing surgery(OR 0.57
[0.37-0.87]) and being DOAC naïve(OR 0.45 [0.29-0.71]) were
associated with a significantly lower odds of underdosing. Bleeding
history(OR 1.86 [1.24-2.80]) and narcotic use(OR 1.67
[1.13-2.46]) were associated with a significantly higher odds for
underdosing. Determinants with a significantly higher odds of overdosing
were renal impairment(OR 11.29 [6.23-20.45]) and body
weight<60 kg(OR 2.34 [1.42-3.85]), whereas the use of
dabigatran(OR 0.24 [0.08-0.71]) and apixaban(OR 0.18
[0.10-0.32]) were associated with a significantly lower odds of
overdosing compared to rivaroxaban. Physicians accepted the pharmacists’
advice in 179 cases (79.2%) consisting of 92 (51.4%) advices for
underdosing, 82 (45.8%) for overdosing and 5 (2.8%) for
contraindications. The advices were effectively implemented for 75
(81.5%) underdosed, 69 (84.1%) overdosed and 4 (80.0%)
contraindicated cases. Conclusion: Inappropriate DOAC prescribing
remains common. Clinical services led by pharmacists helps physicians to
reduce the number of inadequate prescriptions for high risk medications
such as DOACs.