Relevance of depression for anticoagulation management in a routine medical care setting: Results from the ThrombEVAL study program

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Abstract

Depressive symptoms have detrimental effects on quality of life and mortality. Poor adherence to a treatment regimen is a potential mechanism for the increased risk of adverse medical events associated with depression. Regarding oral anticoagulation with vitamin K antagonists, adherence is crucial for the outcome. Little is known about the clinical relevance of current depressiveness for anticoagulation treatment. Objectives: To examine the impact of current depressiveness on anticoagulation treatment in regular medical care. Patients/Methods: We examined the association between clinically significant depressiveness as assessed by the Patient Health Questionnaire-2 ≥ 2 (PHQ-2 ≥ 2) with the percentage of time in the therapeutic range (TTR), self-rated compliance, several aspects of health literacy, anticoagulation side-effects and treatment satisfaction in a cross-sectional study of 1790 oral anticoagulation outpatients. Results: Seven hundred and sixteen participants (40.0%) had clinically significant depressive symptoms. Depressed persons reported lower compliance with intake of prescribed medication and regular visits for control of anticoagulation, more unspecific side-effects (e.g. pruritus) and lower satisfaction with the anticoagulation treatment and their doctors' expertise and empathy. Depressed as compared with non-depressed individuals had a lower TTR (-4.67; 95% CI, -8.39 to -0.95). Increasing severity of depressiveness was related with decreasing TTR. However, depressiveness lost its significant impact on TTR after multivariable adjustment (-3.11; 95% CI, -6.88 to 0.66). Conclusions: Clinically significant depressiveness was highly prevalent and impaired several aspects of anticoagulation treatment. Depressiveness should be regarded as a clinically significant condition that needs to be addressed in the management of anticoagulation patients.

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Michal, M., Prochaska, J. H., Ullmann, A., Keller, K., Gobel, S., Coldewey, M., … Wild, P. S. (2014). Relevance of depression for anticoagulation management in a routine medical care setting: Results from the ThrombEVAL study program. Journal of Thrombosis and Haemostasis, 12(12), 2024–2033. https://doi.org/10.1111/jth.12743

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