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Anne Esselink
Public Documents
2
Medication adherence to direct oral anticoagulants: extent and impact of side effects
Bas Steeg
and 4 more
March 08, 2024
Aim Recent studies have shown that good adherence cannot be taken for granted for patients on direct anticoagulants (DOACs). In this cross-sectional study, adherence among DOAC users was investigated and associations between beliefs about medication, perceived side effects and adherence were investigated. Methods We included 100 randomly selected adult DOAC users visiting one of the two participating Dutch community pharmacies in the summer of 2020. The self-reported adherence (primary outcome) was assessed with the Medication Adherence Rating Scale-5 (MARS-5). Beliefs about DOACs were assessed with the Beliefs about Medicine Questionnaire Specific (BMQ-S) while side effects were assessed with a self-developed questionnaire based on the Lareb Intensive Monitoring (LIM) system. Results Of the participants, 9% reported non-adherence on the MARS-5 (score <24). Associations were found between non-adherence and both reported side effects and side effect burden. Furthermore patients’ belief that DOACs have unpleasant side effects was associated with both non-adherence and more side-effects. No associations were found between adherence and either gender, indication, DOAC or dosage. Conclusion This study confirms that non-adherence in patients on DOACs is prevalent. We recommend that both physicians and pharmacists evaluate adherence and side effects with their DOAC patients on a regular base.
Prior use of therapeutic anticoagulation does not protect against COVID-19 related cl...
Janneke Spiegelenberg
and 16 more
January 19, 2021
The hypercoagulable state observed in COVID-19 could be responsible for morbidity and mortality. In this retrospective study we investigated whether therapeutic anticoagulation prior to infection has a beneficial effect in hospitalized COVID-19 patients. 1154 COVID-19 patients admitted to 6 hospitals in the Netherlands between March and May 2020 were included. We applied 1:3 propensity score matching to evaluate the association between prior therapeutic anticoagulation use and clinical outcome, with in hospital mortality as primary endpoint. 190 (16%) patients used therapeutic anticoagulation prior to admission. In the propensity score matched analyses, we observed no associations between prior use of therapeutic anticoagulation and overall mortality (RR 1.02 (95% CI; 0.80-1.30) or length of hospital stay (7.0 [4-12] vs 7.0 {4-12] days, p=0.69), although we observed a lower risk of pulmonary embolism (RR 0.19 (95% CI; 0.05-0.80). This study shows that prior use of therapeutic anticoagulation is not associated with improved clinical outcome in hospitalized COVID-19 patients.