Judicious Use of Aspirin specially with Anticoagulation Therapy : Nandita Bhatnagar
Judicious Use of
Aspirin specially with Anticoagulation Therapy
My work revolves around looking at evaluation and performance
data generated from Anticoagulation Clinics (ACC), based on Prothrombin Time
(PT)/INR values to manage the Oral Anticoagulation Therapy (OAT). One thing
that I always try to keep in mind is that many people these days are taking Aspirin(acetylsalicylic
acid) without a clear therapeutic indication. I myself take baby Aspirin every
other day and it is over the counter (OTC). Indications for aspirin include
primary prevention in those individuals at risk for coronary artery disease
(CAD).
Patients often receive warfarin or a direct oral anticoagulant
for stroke prevention in atrial fibrillation (AF) and for the treatment and
secondary prevention of venous thromboembolic disease (deep vein thrombosis,
pulmonary embolism, and venous thromboembolism [VTE]) as well as mechanical
heart valves (MHV).Many patients
initiating therapy with warfarin are already receiving aspirin, or they
subsequently initiate aspirin therapy because of other comorbidities.
Anticoagulation therapy has become fairly complicated these
days, specially post Covid-19 pandemic. With so many new drugs and direct
thrombin inhibitors in the mix in the prescription panel there are more adverse
events being reported than before. It is not uncommon for patients to require
multiple antithrombotic medications and is a common clinical scenario.
In a registry-based cohort study of 3688 propensity
score–matched patients followed up prospectively at anticoagulation clinics,
without a heart valve replacement or recent acute coronary syndrome, 37.5%
received aspirin. These patients concurrently using warfarin and aspirin
therapy had a statistically higher rate of bleeding, emergency department
visits, and hospitalizations for bleeding.
Clinicians should be judicious in selecting patients for
combination therapy, and general public should also be careful in ingestion of
Aspirin without clinical justification. An
intervention targeted at reducing aspirin use in this population could have
profound public health impact.
Nandita Bhatnagar
VP
of Clinical & Technical Affairs at CoaguSense
San
Ramon, California, United States
About
My background is in laboratory
medicine starting my career in the Pathology Dept of a 350 bed Hospital & Research
Center in India where I co- authored a paper which was presented in the State
Clinical Biochemist Association. My work as Chief Microbiologist at a food
industry in collaboration with Swedish company Tetrapak, made me recognize my
passion for patient care and so I set up a Path Lab with a satellite center for
11 years. I relocated to USA in 2000 and volunteered at BioGenex in providing
customer-centric molecular pathology solutions.
I sought out a position with a more direct patient care opportunity working at
Cholestech Corporation. I learned the Manufacturing/Vendor Management side of
the POC Testing along with managing the Technical Advisors Team at HemoSense
Inc. When Cholestech Corp and HemoSense Inc were both acquired by Alere
(Previously Inverness Medical) I was kept on board as a valuable asset.
Having enjoyed working in small companies I joined CoaguSense Inc as a Director
of Clinical & Technical Affairs and launched the product after successful
clinical trials and FDA approval. As a Sr. Dir. Clinical/Technical Affairs I
was instrumental in clinical studies, subsequent FDA approval and launch of the
2nd generation smart PT2 Meter.
Apart from the Technical Writing I belong to a Writers Club and had a weekly
column in Indian newspaper for few years as well as few publishing’s in Contra
Costa Times “Real Life”.
In my free time I volunteer in HSS a social and cultural IRS approved 501c3
tax-exempt non-profit organization.

Great work Nandita. Keep it up 🙂
ReplyDeleteBrilliant Nandita
ReplyDeleteWonderful!
ReplyDelete