MONDAY, Jan. 17 (HealthDay News) — New research shows that the risk of dying after suffering a traumatic injury is much higher for people taking warfarin, the most commonly used blood thinner in America.
Researchers found chances almost doubled; say ER docs need to check elderly patients.
The study found that of more than 1.23 million patients who went to emergency rooms with serious injuries, those taking warfarin (Coumadin) were almost twice as likely to die (9.3 percent vs. 4.8 percent).
Even after deaths most probably caused by underlying illnesses were taken into account, the risk was 72 percent higher for those using the medication, said study co-author Dr. Marie Griffin, a professor of preventive medicine and medicine at Vanderbilt University in Nashville, Tenn.
“Warfarin is a good drug, a useful drug. It is used for patients with heart disease to prevent strokes,” said Griffin. “But it is a blood thinner, so it has some worrisome side effects.”
Warfarin can cause internal bleeding after someone is injured, experts say.
“This is a descriptive study,” said Griffin. “So we’re saying where we are at this point, not what we can do about it.” But people taking the drug need to be aware of the risk, she said.
Also, the study “is partly to alert physicians that 12 percent of older people who present [to hospitals] with trauma are on this medication, so you need to think about it,” said Griffin. If doctors know a patient is taking the drug, they attempt to reverse its effect, sometimes using vitamin K and frozen plasma, according to the study.
Because use of the drug “has increased a lot in the last 10 years, we looked at the effect on patients with trauma,” she said.
Exact figures aren’t known, but the U.S. Food and Drug Administration estimated that 31 million prescriptions were written for warfarin in 2004, according to the study, published online Jan. 17 in the Archives of Surgery.
The study used data from 402 trauma centers reported to the National Trauma Data Bank from 2002 to 2007. Of those patients over 65 years old, 12.8 percent were using warfarin when they went to a hospital with a traumatic injury in 2006.
The analysis was adjusted to eliminate the effect that factors such as race, ethnicity, gender and severity of injury could have on the findings.
The risk associated with warfarin has been noticed by emergency room doctors for about the last five years, but this study is important because it involves such a large number of patients, said Dr. Pratik Doshi, director of emergency critical care at Memorial Hermann Texas Medical Center in Houston.
“It is looking at 1.2 million encounters. No one has been able to do it at the level this study does,” said Doshi, noting that previous studies showing similar problems with the drug had only about 80 or 90 subjects.
“It’s nice to see this in a setting where it has real credibility,” said Doshi, who is also an assistant professor of emergency medicine and internal medicine at the University of Texas Health Science Center, Houston. “There can be no argument now.”
Griffin and Doshi said they would like to see continued research to find out how to reduce the risk of death in this group of patients.
Doshi said his trauma center has procedures in place to make sure doctors know when a trauma patient is on warfarin, but a lot of smaller hospitals might not.
Citing pressures the health-care system places on doctors to see more patients in less time, he said “the price we pay” is that often physicians aren’t able to carefully explain the risk associated with warfarin.
“That conversation probably doesn’t happen as often as it should,” said Doshi, adding that “even a fall from a standing position can be very significant” for an elderly person on warfarin.
People who take the drug should discuss the risks with family members so they can inform doctors should an injury occur, said Doshi.
A related study in the same issue of the journal showed that many Americans living in rural areas lack good access to trauma care. Researchers at the University of California, San Francisco, used data on maps and zip codes to find that while only 12 percent of urban residents had “difficult access” to a trauma center, defined as 60 minutes or more of driving time, 31 percent of rural residents faced the same travel obstacles to trauma care.
“Vulnerable populations,” including blacks, foreign-born people and people with low incomes, were most likely to have “difficult access” to trauma care, according to the study.
Other barriers to such health care included language and cultural differences that sometimes inhibit those needing medical attention from seeking it, according to the research.
More information
For more on the essentials of trauma care, go to World Health Organization.
SOURCES: Marie Griffin, M.D., professor, preventive medicine and medicine, Department of Preventive Medicine, Vanderbilt University Medical Center, Nashville, Tenn.; Pratik Doshi, M.D., director, emergency critical care, Memorial Hermann Texas Medical Center, and assistant professor, emergency medicine and internal medicine, UT Health, Houston; Jan. 17, 2011, Archives of Surgery
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