Semi-empirical anticoagulation model (SAM): INR monitoring during Warfarin therapy.
Marco BontempiPublished in: Journal of pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics (2021)
The International Normalized Ratio (INR) monitoring is an essential component to manage thrombotic disease therapy. This study presents a semi-empirical model of INR as a function of time and assigned therapy (Warfarin, k-vitamin). With respect to other methodologies, this model is able to describe the INR using a limited number of parameters and is able to describe the time variation of INR described in the literature. The presented methodology showed great accuracy in model calibration [(trueness (precision)]: 0.2% (0.1%) to 1.2% (0.3%) for coagulation factors, from 5% (9%) to 9.7% (12%) for Warfarin-related parameters and 38% (40%) for K-vitamin-related parameters. The latter value was considered acceptable given the assumptions made in the model. It has two other important results: the first is that it was able to correctly estimate INR with respect to daily therapy doses taken from the literature. The second is that it introduces a single numeric semi-empirical parameter that is able to correlate INR/dose response to physiological and environmental condition of patients.
Keyphrases
- atrial fibrillation
- venous thromboembolism
- systematic review
- end stage renal disease
- newly diagnosed
- direct oral anticoagulants
- ejection fraction
- chronic kidney disease
- mesenchymal stem cells
- bone marrow
- peritoneal dialysis
- prognostic factors
- smoking cessation
- drug induced
- oral anticoagulants
- patient reported outcomes
- low cost