Lam Jason, Schulman Sam, Witt Daniel M, Vandvik Per Olav, Qayyum Fareeha, Holbrook Anne M
Department of Clinical Epidemiology and Biostatistics, McMaster University, Hamilton, ON, Canada.
Pharmacotherapy. 2013 Nov;33(11):1184-90. doi: 10.1002/phar.1302. Epub 2013 Jun 6.
Difficulties managing warfarin therapy have led to speculation that daily supplementation with a low dose of vitamin K might improve anticoagulation control and clinical outcomes. Thus we sought to review the available medical literature systematically examining the effectiveness of low-dose vitamin K supplementation for the reduction of clinically relevant adverse events due to vitamin K antagonist (VKA) use and for stabilization of the international normalized ratio (INR).
We searched the Medline and Embase databases, the Cochrane Library, International Pharmaceutical Abstracts, and the U.S. National Institutes of Health clinical trials registry for randomized controlled trials of vitamin K supplementation versus placebo in patients receiving a VKA. We evaluated the outcomes of hemorrhage, thromboembolic events, and percentage of time in therapeutic range (TTR) of INRs by using the Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development and Evaluation system for rating quality of evidence in the abstracted studies.
All randomized controlled trials studies published between 1970 and August 2012 which fitted our search strategy.
Patients over the age of 18 years on VKA therapy.
Of the 624 studies we identified and screened, three studies (626 patients) were included in the meta-analysis. Most of the patients had a satisfactory TTR at baseline. We found low-quality evidence--downgraded for imprecision and risk of bias (i.e., limitation in study design and/or execution)--of no effect of vitamin K use (100 to 200 μg) on hemorrhagic events (relative risk [RR] 3.2, 95% confidence interval [CI] 0.2-64.2) and thromboembolic events (RR 2.2, 95% CI 0.1-47.5) and a significant but clinically unimportant effect on TTR with an absolute increase of 3.5% (95% CI 1.1-6.0).
This meta-analysis, despite the few studies and overall low quality, suggests no beneficial role of low-dose (100 to 200 μg) vitamin K supplementation on the reduction of clinically relevant adverse events in patients taking VKAs, despite a small improvement of the TTR. Data were insufficient, however, from patients with unstable INRs.
华法林治疗管理存在困难,这引发了一种推测,即每日补充低剂量维生素K可能会改善抗凝控制及临床结局。因此,我们试图系统回顾现有医学文献,以研究低剂量维生素K补充剂在降低因使用维生素K拮抗剂(VKA)导致的临床相关不良事件及稳定国际标准化比值(INR)方面的有效性。
我们检索了Medline和Embase数据库、Cochrane图书馆、国际药学文摘以及美国国立卫生研究院临床试验注册库,以查找在接受VKA治疗的患者中比较维生素K补充剂与安慰剂的随机对照试验。我们使用推荐分级评估、制定与评价系统来评估出血、血栓栓塞事件以及INR处于治疗范围(TTR)的时间百分比等结局,以对纳入研究的证据质量进行评级。
1970年至2012年8月间发表的所有符合我们检索策略的随机对照试验研究。
接受VKA治疗的18岁以上患者。
在我们识别和筛选的624项研究中,有三项研究(626名患者)被纳入荟萃分析。大多数患者在基线时TTR令人满意。我们发现低质量证据(因不精确性和偏倚风险——即研究设计和/或实施存在局限性——而降级)表明,使用维生素K(100至200μg)对出血事件(相对风险[RR]3.2,95%置信区间[CI]0.2 - 64.2)和血栓栓塞事件(RR 2.2,95% CI 0.1 - 47.5)无影响,对TTR有显著但临床意义不大的影响,绝对增加3.(95% CI 1.1 - 6.0)。
尽管研究数量少且总体质量较低,但这项荟萃分析表明,低剂量(100至200μg)维生素K补充剂在降低服用VKA患者的临床相关不良事件方面无有益作用,尽管TTR略有改善。然而,来自INR不稳定患者的数据不足。