학술논문

An evidence-based warfarin management protocol reduces surgical delay in hip fracture patients.
Document Type
Academic Journal
Source
Journal of Orthopaedics & Traumatology (J ORTHOP TRAUMATOL), Mar2014; 15(1): 21-27. (7p)
Subject
Language
English
ISSN
1590-9921
Abstract
Background: Up to 4% of patients presenting with a hip fracture may be on warfarin at admission. There is little consensus on the timing, dosage or route of vitamin K administration. We aimed to evaluate the impact of a locally developed, evidence-based protocol for perioperative warfarin management on the admission-to-operation time (AOT) in hip fracture patients.Materials and Methods: Clinical and demographic data were collected prospectively for hip fracture patients who were on warfarin at the time of admission (post-protocol group) and compared to a historical control group of patients who were on warfarin before implementation of the protocol (pre-protocol group). Univariate analysis was undertaken to identify any significant differences between the two groups.Results: Twenty-seven patients in the pre-protocol group (27/616, 4.4%) and 40 patients in the post-protocol group (4.7%, 40/855) were on warfarin at admission. There was a significant reduction in the median AOT from 73 h (IQR 46-105) to 37.7 h (IQR 28-45) after implementation of the warfarin protocol (p < 0.001). The proportion of patients operated on within 48 h of admission increased from 30% (8/27) in the pre-protocol group to 80% (32/40) in the post-protocol group (p < 0.001). No significant differences in hospital length of stay (p = 0.77) or the postoperative warfarin recommencement time (p = 0.90) were noted between the two groups.Conclusion: Implementation of a perioperative warfarin management protocol can expedite surgery in hip fracture patients, but did not reduce hospital stay in our cohort, possibly because of a delay in recommencing warfarin in these patients postoperatively.Level Of Evidence: Level III.