Summary
The clinical characteristics and long-term outcomes of patients presenting with acute
pulmonary embolism (PE) during treatment with warfarin have not been described. Clinical
details of all patients admitted to a tertiary institution from 2000-2007 with acute
PE were retrieved retrospectively, baseline warfarin status and the international
normalised ratio (INR) were recorded, and their outcomes tracked using a statewide
death registry. Of 923 patients with clearly documented warfarin status included in
this study, 83 (9%) were taking warfarin. Mean (± standard deviation) day-1 INR of
those taking warfarin was 2.3 ± 0.9, with 67% of patients therapeutically anti-coagulated
(INR ≥2.0) at presentation (49 patients with INR <2.5 and 34 with INR ≥2.5). Patients
taking warfarin on admission were more likely to have heart failure, atrial fibrillation
and valvular heart disease, with similar prevalence of malignancy and ischaemic heart
disease, compared to patients not on warfarin. Total mortality of the cohort (mean
follow-up 4.0 ± 2.5 years) was 31.6% (in-hospital mortality 1.5%), and was similar
between warfarin and no warfarin groups. There was however a greater than four-fold
increased risk of post-discharge death due to recurrent PE for the patients taking
warfarin on admission (hazard ratio [HR] 4.43, 95% confidence interval [CI] 1.36-14.42,
p=0.01). Among patients taking warfarin on admission, day-1 INR <2.5 significantly
increased long-term all-cause mortality compared to INR ≥2.5 (adjusted HR 2.51, 95%
CI 1.08-5.86, p=0.03). In conclusion, patients presenting with PE during treatment
with warfarin have an increased risk of death from recurrent PE. Admission INR appears
to have independent long-term prognostic importance in these patients.
Keywords
Pulmonary embolism - anticoagulation - warfarin - international normalized ratio