2018
DOI: 10.1016/j.artd.2018.07.006
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Aspirin: are patients actually taking it?—A quality assessment study

Abstract: BackgroundThe purpose of the study was to assess patient adherence to an aspirin-based prophylactic deep venous thromboembolism (DVT) care management plan after total lower extremity arthroplasty.MethodsUsing a cross-sectional study design, patients who underwent total hip or knee replacement surgery by a single senior surgeon were surveyed at their routine 6-week follow-up appointment regarding adherence to aspirin DVT prophylaxis. Postoperatively, patients were advised to take 325 mg of aspirin twice daily f… Show more

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Cited by 6 publications
(9 citation statements)
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“…13 Our findings regarding reasons for non-adherence are broadly consistent with the few studies that have reported this outcome. 7,10,12 Like other studies, we found that the main reasons were practitionerand education-related rather than being related to drug availability or route of administration. Three recent case series (two for LMWH and one for aspirin) 7,10,12 reported that the most common reasons for non-adherence were forgotten doses, uncertainty of how long to take the medication for, or provider instructions that recommended a change of dose or treatment cessation.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 77%
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“…13 Our findings regarding reasons for non-adherence are broadly consistent with the few studies that have reported this outcome. 7,10,12 Like other studies, we found that the main reasons were practitionerand education-related rather than being related to drug availability or route of administration. Three recent case series (two for LMWH and one for aspirin) 7,10,12 reported that the most common reasons for non-adherence were forgotten doses, uncertainty of how long to take the medication for, or provider instructions that recommended a change of dose or treatment cessation.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 77%
“…Non-adherence for injected LMWH as VTE prophylaxis has been reported to range from 10% to 46% 5,7,9,10,15 and from 2% to 52% for oral prophylaxis. 9,10,12,[16][17][18] Based on these figures and on the hypothesis that non-adherence for aspirin would be lower, the sample size calculation used an expected non-adherence of 30% in the enoxaparin group and 15% in the aspirin group, a power of 80% and level of significance of 0.05, yielding a total sample size of 240 patients. Given there were 31 participating hospitals, the aim was to recruit eight patients from each hospital (four from each treatment arm), yielding a total sample of 248.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…In addition, the authors also recognise that prescriptions are used as a proxy for anticoagulant use, and we are unable to account for adherence rates. 31 The database used does not offer the patient-level data that would have allowed us to perform a multivariate regression to account for all potential differences in medical comorbidites. Despite this, we were able to match each group by age and sex to find that the CCI for each group was identical.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%