• Br. J. Haematol. · Mar 2006

    Poor correlation of supratherapeutic international normalised ratio and vitamin K-dependent procoagulant factor levels during warfarin therapy.

    • Ravindra Sarode, Ajay Rawal, Ray Lee, Yu-Min Shen, and Eugene P Frenkel.
    • Department of Pathology, The University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center at Dallas, Dallas, TX 75390-9073, USA. ravi.sarode@utsouthwestern.edu
    • Br. J. Haematol. 2006 Mar 1;132(5):604-7.

    AbstractPatients with a supratherapeutic international normalised ratio (ST-INR) are at risk for bleeding. ST-INR is corrected by withholding warfarin therapy and often by supplementing vitamin K or providing vitamin K-dependent factors; the exact therapeutic decision is based on the extent of the prolonged INR. Currently, ST-INRs are frequently observed in clinical practice due to the use of sensitive recombinant tissue thromboplastin reagents and automation. However, there are scant data correlating an ST-INR with various vitamin K-dependent factors. This prospective cohort study, set in a large tertiary care teaching hospital for the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center at Dallas, defined the relationship between ST-INR (>5.0) and measured vitamin K-dependent procoagulant factors. Prothrombin time, INR and vitamin K-dependent factors II, VII, IX and X were measured in 78 patients with an INR > 5.0 (ST-INR) who were on warfarin therapy for more than 2 months. There was no significant relationship between the ST-INR and levels of important vitamin K-dependent factors II and X. These data support the recent guidelines that the management of an INR > 5.0 should be driven by the clinical determinants rather than specific INR values per se.

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