Vascular Health and Risk Management (Oct 2019)
Clinical Characteristics And Health Care Resources In Patients Treated With Oral Anticoagulants: Evidences From Italian Administrative Databases
Abstract
L Degli Esposti,1 M Andretta,2 G Di Pasquale,3 M Gambera,4 S Saragoni,1 V Perrone,1 S Buda1 1CliCon S.r.l. Health, Economics & Outcomes Research, Ravenna, Italy; 2Local Pharmaceutical Service, Verona Local Health Authority, Verona, Italy; 3Department of Cardiology, Maggiore Hospital, Bologna, Italy; 4Local Pharmaceutical Service, Bergamo Local Health Authority, Bergamo, ItalyCorrespondence: V PerroneCliCon S.r.l, Health, Economics and Outcomes Research, Via Salara, 36, Ravenna 48100, ItalyTel +39 054438393Fax +39 0544212699Email [email protected]: 1) To evaluate anticoagulation treatment patterns and health care resource use in adult patients with a discharge diagnosis of non-valvular atrial fibrillation (NVAF) in an Italian real-world setting and 2) to describe the characteristics of NVAF patients in relation to treatment.Design: A retrospective cohort study in a “real-world” setting.Setting: Data were analysed by integrating administrative databases that included approximately 2,000,000 individuals assisted by the National Health System from two Italian Local Health Units.Participants: All adult patients with at least one hospital discharge or ≥2 outpatient visits with a diagnosis code for NVAF from 1/01/2011 to 31/12/2015 were included.Main outcome measures: Anticoagulation treatment patterns, health care resource use and major bleeding events that occurred during the follow-up period were evaluated.Results: 32,863 NVAF patients were included, of whom 7,831 had at least one prescription of oral anticoagulants. Among them, 6,876 patients were vitamin K antagonists (VKA) users and 955 were non-vitamin K antagonist oral anticoagulant (NOAC) users at index date (ID). During the follow-up period, the use of antiplatelet drugs was higher among VKA-naïve users than the NOAC-naïve users. Among NOAC users, 76.1% showed an adherence level ≥80% during follow-up. The rate of bleeding events resulted higher for VKA patients compared to NOAC patients. The unadjusted incidence rate was 10.46 per 1000 person-year for VKA patients and 4.55 per 1,000 person-years for NOAC patients. The overall annual cost (in term of drugs, hospitalisations and outpatient specialist services) was € 5,156.13 for VKA and € 4,630.57 for NOAC.Conclusion: This unselected cohort study, on NVAF patients being prescribed oral anticoagulants, highlights that VKA was largely prescribed and the great majority of patients on NOACs were adherent to treatment. Most of the OAC patients still received antiplatelet agents in combination, and in NOAC patients, we registered a lower number of bleeding events compared with VKA.Keywords: non-valvular atrial fibrillation, vitamin K antagonists, non-vitamin K antagonist oral anticoagulants, anticoagulation treatment patterns, real-world setting