Post-operative anticoagulation therapy after knee or hip replacement: The role of patients' preferences in selection of therapy

Patients who receive hip or knee replacement surgery should be anticoagulated to prevent thrombosis-related events, such as pulmonary embolism. The Pulmonary Embolism Prevention after Hip and Knee Replacement (PEPPER) is a large pragmatic trial studying which anticoagulant (aspirin, warfarin, or riv...

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Main Authors Lenert, Leslie A, Scherbakov, Dmitry, Shaoibi, Azza, Neelon, Brian, Reynolds, Amy, Kernan, Laura, Lambourne, Carol A, Pellegrini, Jr, Vincent D
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States 06.08.2025
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Summary:Patients who receive hip or knee replacement surgery should be anticoagulated to prevent thrombosis-related events, such as pulmonary embolism. The Pulmonary Embolism Prevention after Hip and Knee Replacement (PEPPER) is a large pragmatic trial studying which anticoagulant (aspirin, warfarin, or rivaroxaban) is optimal. As an adjunct to this study, we examined the role of patients' preferences in individual tailoring of therapy. We constructed a multimedia conjoint analysis (CA) survey based on anticoagulants' beneficial and adverse effects at the expected probabilities being studied in the PEPPER trial. We recruited 212 hip and knee post-surgery patients at the Medical University of South Carolina who were eligible for the PEPPER trial and studied their preferences one to seven months after surgery. K-means clustering was used to characterize heterogeneity in patients' preferences. Across the studied population, expected risks of major adverse effects (bleeding, venous thrombosis, and pulmonary embolism) were, on average, rated as being of similar importance, with somewhat greater weight being placed on avoiding risks of pulmonary embolism. However, few patients had values near the average for the population, with patients grouping in three distinct, minimally-overlapping segments or phenotypes: Thrombosis-focused values (aligns with rivaroxaban treatment), Balanced values (bleeding and thrombosis-focus (aligns with aspirin)), and "Out-of-pocket-cost focused values (aligns with aspirin or warfarin). In the post-knee/hip replacement setting, a CA survey revealed that patients value the risks and benefits of anticoagulation differently, falling into three distinct phenotypes that have implications for the individualization of therapy. Providers should tailor post-operative anticoagulation to patients' preferences.
ISSN:2693-5015
DOI:10.21203/rs.3.rs-7289754/v1