Living alone is associated with difficulties using the blood thinner warfarin in men, but not women, stated new study.

Warfarin is a common anticoagulant treatment worldwide for preventing stroke in atrial fibrillation, the most common heart rhythm disorder. It is a type of vitamin K antagonist since it reduces blood clotting by blocking the action of vitamin K. Continuous blood-monitoring with international normalised ratio (INR) measurements is required for warfarin to be safe and effective, since too little of the drug may allow a blot clot to form and cause a stroke while too much causes bleeding.
Quality of INR control is usually measured as time in therapeutic range (TTR), meaning the percentage of time with optimal warfarin concentrations in the blood to prevent stroke and avoid bleeding. ESC guidelines advise being in the therapeutic range at least 70% of the time.(2) Warfarin can be challenging for patients, with dose adjustments needed to maintain high TTR coupled with a number of food and drug interactions.
Previous studies on anticoagulation control have mainly identified clinical variables that predict low TTR - for example depression and cancer. But few studies have evaluated socioeconomic factors. This study examined the influence of cohabitation status on TTR in men and women with atrial fibrillation.
A total of 4,772 atrial fibrillation patients with six months of continuous warfarin use and INR monitoring were identified from Danish registers. Patients were divided according to sex and whether they lived alone or with others. The researchers calculated TTR for men living alone, men not living alone, women living alone, and women not living alone separately. Factors known to influence TTR, such as depression, cancer, interacting medication, and age, were measured and adjusted for in a regression model.
The study found that the median TTR in men living along was 57%. After adjustment for other factors known to be important for TTR, this was still significantly lower - by 3.6% - than in cohabiting men.
Women living alone also had lower TTR than cohabiting women, but after adjustment the difference was very small (0.2%) and non-significant.
He concluded: "Men who live on their own may need extra support to use warfarin, such as education, home visits, telephone contacts, or additional follow-up visits. They might also consider using a newer type of drug, a non-vitamin K antagonist oral anticoagulant (NOAC), which is easier to manage and has fewer interactions with food and drugs compared to warfarin."
Source-Eurekalert
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