Thromb Haemost 1997; 78(06): 1438-1443
DOI: 10.1055/s-0038-1665430
Rapid Communication
Schattauer GmbH Stuttgart

Thrombotic Events during Oral Anticoagulant Treatment: Results of the Inception-cohort, Prospective, Collaborative ISCOAT Study

Gualtiero Palareti
,
Cesare Manotti
,
Armando D’Angelo
,
Vittorio Pengo
,
Nicoletta Erba
,
Marco Moia
,
Nicola Ciavarella
,
Gianluigi Devoto
,
Mauro Berrettini
,
Nicoietta Leali
,
Mario Poggi
,
Cristina Legnani
,
Serena Musolesi
,
Sergio Coccheri
,
ISCOAT Study Group (Italian Study on Complications of Oral Anticoagulant Therapy)
Further Information

Publication History

Received 28 1997

Accepted after resubmission 17 July 1997

Publication Date:
12 July 2018 (online)

Summary

The paper reports on rate and type of thrombotic events occurring during the observational, prospective, inception-cohort, multicenter ISCOAT study. 2,745 unselected, daily practice patients, consecutively referring to 34 Italian anticoagulation clinics to monitor the oral anticoagulant treatment, were included in the study from beginning of their first anticoagulant course. During a total follow-up of 2,011 patient-years of treatment 70 thrombotic events (3.5 per 100 patient years) were recorded in 67 patients: 20 fatal (1%), 39 major (1.9%) and 11 minor (0.6%). 34/70 events occurred within the first 90 days of treatment (relative risk - at multivariate analysis - of <90 days vs. >90 = 20.6, C.I. 12.7-33.5; p <0.0001). The risk was higher in patients aged >70 y (1.62, C.I. 1.0-2.61; p <0.05), and when indication for anticoagulant treatment was peripheral/cerebral arterial disease (1.84, C.I. 1.01-3.36; p <0.05). The frequency of thrombotic events was 17.5% when international normalised ratio (INR) levels were <1.5, decreasing to 2.3% for INRs within the 2-2.99 category (relative risk of INRs <2.0 vs. >2 = 1.88, C.1.1.16-3.07; p <0.05).

The recorded rate of thrombotic events was lower than that reported in the few available studies. A greater risk should be expected during the first 90 days of treatment, when anticoagulation levels are <2.0 INR, in patients > 70 years and in those with cerebrovascular/peripheral arterial disease.

 
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