Underuse of medical thromboprophylaxis in mobile elderly inpatients: The SWITCO65+ cohort

Abstract Background Hospital‐associated venous thromboembolism (HA‐VTE) can be prevented by pharmacologic thromboprophylaxis. Thrombotic risk assessment models (RAMs) are essential tools to improve inadequately prescribed thromboprophylaxis. Among cases of HA‐VTE, our study objectives are to explore...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Marc Blondon, Andreas Limacher, Marc Righini, Drahomir Aujesky, Marie Méan
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2021-01-01
Series:Research and Practice in Thrombosis and Haemostasis
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1002/rth2.12361
id doaj-2431a59c8bf3446f9dc0dd9ebdfe5931
record_format Article
spelling doaj-2431a59c8bf3446f9dc0dd9ebdfe59312021-02-24T09:15:39ZengWileyResearch and Practice in Thrombosis and Haemostasis2475-03792021-01-015114214710.1002/rth2.12361Underuse of medical thromboprophylaxis in mobile elderly inpatients: The SWITCO65+ cohortMarc Blondon0Andreas Limacher1Marc Righini2Drahomir Aujesky3Marie Méan4Division of Angiology and Hemostasis Geneva University Hospitals and Faculty of Medicine Geneva SwitzerlandCTU Bern University of Bern Bern SwitzerlandDivision of Angiology and Hemostasis Geneva University Hospitals and Faculty of Medicine Geneva SwitzerlandDivision of General Internal Medicine Bern University Hospital Bern SwitzerlandDivision of General Internal Medicine University of Lausanne Lausanne SwitzerlandAbstract Background Hospital‐associated venous thromboembolism (HA‐VTE) can be prevented by pharmacologic thromboprophylaxis. Thrombotic risk assessment models (RAMs) are essential tools to improve inadequately prescribed thromboprophylaxis. Among cases of HA‐VTE, our study objectives are to explore the classifications of available thrombosis RAMs, the adequacy of thromboprophylaxis and risk factors for inadequate thromboprophylaxis. Methods We identified cases of HA‐VTE occurring during medical hospitalizations within a multicenter Swiss venous thromboembolism (VTE) cohort (2009‐2013). We calculated the proportion of VTE cases deemed at high risk with 4 VTE RAMs (Geneva, Simplified Geneva, Padua, and Improve) and the adequacy of administered pharmacologic thromboprophylaxis, and explored risk factors for underprescription of thromboprophylaxis in high‐risk inpatients. Results Among 66 medical inpatients with HA‐VTE, 60.6% had pulmonary embolism. The sensitivities of the Geneva, Simplified Geneva, Padua, and Improve RAMs were 86.4%, 80.3%, 72.7%, and 57.6%, respectively. The proportion of inadequate thromboprophylaxis was high, as 62.5%‐71.1% of high‐risk inpatients had not received it. Among the high‐risk group according to the Simplified Geneva RAM, absence of immobilization was the only variable significantly associated with an inadequate use of thromboprophylaxis (odds ratio, 3.59; 95% confidence interval, 1.08‐11.88). Conclusions We found a dramatically high proportion of inadequate medical thromboprophylaxis among inpatients who suffered from HA‐VTE. This reinforces the need for global and local quality‐improvement efforts to promote adequate use of thromboprophylaxis in elderly inpatients. Mobility may favor the underuse of thromboprophylaxis, and clinicians should stay alert to other thrombotic risk factors in mobile inpatients.https://doi.org/10.1002/rth2.12361anticoagulantshospitalizationinpatientsquality improvementrisk assessmentthrombosis
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Marc Blondon
Andreas Limacher
Marc Righini
Drahomir Aujesky
Marie Méan
spellingShingle Marc Blondon
Andreas Limacher
Marc Righini
Drahomir Aujesky
Marie Méan
Underuse of medical thromboprophylaxis in mobile elderly inpatients: The SWITCO65+ cohort
Research and Practice in Thrombosis and Haemostasis
anticoagulants
hospitalization
inpatients
quality improvement
risk assessment
thrombosis
author_facet Marc Blondon
Andreas Limacher
Marc Righini
Drahomir Aujesky
Marie Méan
author_sort Marc Blondon
title Underuse of medical thromboprophylaxis in mobile elderly inpatients: The SWITCO65+ cohort
title_short Underuse of medical thromboprophylaxis in mobile elderly inpatients: The SWITCO65+ cohort
title_full Underuse of medical thromboprophylaxis in mobile elderly inpatients: The SWITCO65+ cohort
title_fullStr Underuse of medical thromboprophylaxis in mobile elderly inpatients: The SWITCO65+ cohort
title_full_unstemmed Underuse of medical thromboprophylaxis in mobile elderly inpatients: The SWITCO65+ cohort
title_sort underuse of medical thromboprophylaxis in mobile elderly inpatients: the switco65+ cohort
publisher Wiley
series Research and Practice in Thrombosis and Haemostasis
issn 2475-0379
publishDate 2021-01-01
description Abstract Background Hospital‐associated venous thromboembolism (HA‐VTE) can be prevented by pharmacologic thromboprophylaxis. Thrombotic risk assessment models (RAMs) are essential tools to improve inadequately prescribed thromboprophylaxis. Among cases of HA‐VTE, our study objectives are to explore the classifications of available thrombosis RAMs, the adequacy of thromboprophylaxis and risk factors for inadequate thromboprophylaxis. Methods We identified cases of HA‐VTE occurring during medical hospitalizations within a multicenter Swiss venous thromboembolism (VTE) cohort (2009‐2013). We calculated the proportion of VTE cases deemed at high risk with 4 VTE RAMs (Geneva, Simplified Geneva, Padua, and Improve) and the adequacy of administered pharmacologic thromboprophylaxis, and explored risk factors for underprescription of thromboprophylaxis in high‐risk inpatients. Results Among 66 medical inpatients with HA‐VTE, 60.6% had pulmonary embolism. The sensitivities of the Geneva, Simplified Geneva, Padua, and Improve RAMs were 86.4%, 80.3%, 72.7%, and 57.6%, respectively. The proportion of inadequate thromboprophylaxis was high, as 62.5%‐71.1% of high‐risk inpatients had not received it. Among the high‐risk group according to the Simplified Geneva RAM, absence of immobilization was the only variable significantly associated with an inadequate use of thromboprophylaxis (odds ratio, 3.59; 95% confidence interval, 1.08‐11.88). Conclusions We found a dramatically high proportion of inadequate medical thromboprophylaxis among inpatients who suffered from HA‐VTE. This reinforces the need for global and local quality‐improvement efforts to promote adequate use of thromboprophylaxis in elderly inpatients. Mobility may favor the underuse of thromboprophylaxis, and clinicians should stay alert to other thrombotic risk factors in mobile inpatients.
topic anticoagulants
hospitalization
inpatients
quality improvement
risk assessment
thrombosis
url https://doi.org/10.1002/rth2.12361
work_keys_str_mv AT marcblondon underuseofmedicalthromboprophylaxisinmobileelderlyinpatientstheswitco65cohort
AT andreaslimacher underuseofmedicalthromboprophylaxisinmobileelderlyinpatientstheswitco65cohort
AT marcrighini underuseofmedicalthromboprophylaxisinmobileelderlyinpatientstheswitco65cohort
AT drahomiraujesky underuseofmedicalthromboprophylaxisinmobileelderlyinpatientstheswitco65cohort
AT mariemean underuseofmedicalthromboprophylaxisinmobileelderlyinpatientstheswitco65cohort
_version_ 1724253063124877312