Awarded/Presented
Tags
Bleeding Disorders Conference
Collaboration/Team Models
Researchers
Avinash Patwardhan, Joan Couden, Kirstin Schmidt, Jose' Iglesias

Objective:

To examine the causes for spontaneous bleeds in severe hemophilia A patients on prophylaxis in an effort to increase care collaboration, decrease these incidents and optimize care.

Methods:

From our company’s bleeding disorders patients’ prescriptions and assessment records databases between April 1,2011 and March 31, 2012 (12 months period), prescriptions and assessment records were analyzed for prophylaxis (factor VIII) patients with severe hemophilia A who did not have inhibitors and who had at least one bleed (self- reported) requiring extra factor in the last 12 months. Due to limitations related to data retrieval from different databases, we eliminated all the patients where accuracy of match was doubtful resulting in a reduced “N”. Out of the 52 patients, 17 were identified with at least one spontaneous bleed. To identify details of psychosocial environment that might have contributed to the bleeds, chart reviews were done on five among them who reported two or more spontaneous bleeds.

Results:

Patients with four bleeds:

Patient A developed a left ankle target joint. Patient has not consistently reported bleeds to HTC. Specialty RPh notified HTC for evaluation of dose and to report bleed pattern.

Patient B frequently missed doses resulting in spontaneous bleeds.

Patients with three bleeds:

Patient C communicated well with home care and HTC. This collaboration contributed to care plan personalization and an increase in dose and frequency resulting in cessation of spontaneous bleeds.

Patients with two bleeds:

Patient D is a toddler making it difficult to identify spontaneous versus trauma induced bleeding. Homecare nurse communicated frequently with HTC leading to dosing adjustments resulting in rare spontaneous bleeds.

Patient E is a non-compliant teen and at times does not adhere to his prophy regimen.

Conclusion:

The goal of prophylaxis should be zero spontaneous bleeds. There are a variety of factors that might contribute to the bleeds such as lack of compliance, development of target joints, age, growth spurts, or improper dosing frequency and amount. Collaborating with a home infusion company or specialty pharmacy can afford an opportunity to identify and address some of these factors to take corrective actions wherever possible and hence to optimize outcomes.