Article

Prevention of treatment-related fluid overload reduces estimated effective cost of prothrombin complex concentrate in patients requiring rapid vitamin K antagonist reversal

Expert Review of Pharmacoeconomics & Outcomes Research · 16(1):135-9 · 2015
DOI: 10.1586/14737167.2015.1071194
Christopher A Jones et al.
Christopher A JonesKatrina DucisJeffrey PetrozzinoEric ClarkMark K FungChristian PetersIndra Neil SarkarEmilia KrolBrina PochalAmanda BoutrusPeter WeimersheimerKalev Freeman

INTRODUCTION: Fresh frozen plasma (FFP) is a frequently used human blood product to reverse the effects of vitamin K antagonists. While FFP is relatively economical, its large fluid volume can lead to hospitalization complications, therefore increasing the overall cost of use. MATERIALS & METHODS: A recently published article by Sarode et al., in Circulation, described the rate of volume overload associated with FFP use for reversal of vitamin K antagonists. This condition, described as transfusion-associated circulatory overload, has a defined rate of intensive care admission, which also has a well-reported average cost. The additional monetary value of intensive care unit admission and caring for fluid overload is then compared to the cost of another product, four-factor prothrombin complex concentrates, which does not, as per the Sarode paper, result in fluid overload. RESULTS: The increased costs attributed to FFP-associated fluid overload for vitamin K antagonist reversal partly defrays the increased upfront cost of four-factor prothrombin complex concentrates. DISCUSSION: FFP is commonly used to acutely reverse the effects of vitamin K antagonists. However, its use requires significant time for infusion, may lead to fluid overload, and is not fully effective in compete anticoagulation reversal. One alternative therapy for anticoagulant reversal is use of prothrombin complex concentrates, which are rapidly infused, are not associated with fluid overload, and are effective in complete reversal of coagulation measurements. This should be considered for patients with acute bleeding emergencies.

Aimwell Signal Relevance AIMWELL EDITORIAL

This publication published in Expert Review of Pharmacoeconomics & Outcomes Research represents peer-reviewed research in Anticoagulants, Blood Coagulation Factors, Blood Component Transfusion directly relevant to Aimwell’s evidence intelligence infrastructure. It contributes to the FHIN network’s knowledge base on Anticoagulants and supports data-driven clinical decision making for Aimwell member organizations.

AnticoagulantsBlood Coagulation FactorsBlood Component TransfusionHumansPlasmaVitamin K

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Published2015

Source attribution: PubMed / NCBI · CrossRef

Retrieved: May 21, 2026

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