RT Journal Article T1 Influence of renal function on anticoagulation control in patients with non-valvular atrial fibrillation taking vitamin K antagonists A1 Lobos-Bejarano, Jose M. A1 Castellanos Rodriguez, Angel A1 Barrios, Vivencio A1 Escobar, Carlos A1 Polo-Garcia, Jose A1 Carlos del Castillo-Rodriguez, Jose A1 Vargas-Ortega, Diego A1 Lopez-Pineda, Adriana A1 Prieto-Valiente, Luis A1 Lip, Gregory Y. H. A1 PAULA Study Team, K1 anticoagulation K1 atrial fibrillation K1 chronic kidney disease K1 vitamin K antagonist K1 Chronic kidney-disease K1 Same-tt2r2 score K1 Stroke K1 Quality K1 Warfarin K1 Risk K1 Mortality K1 Spain K1 Care K1 Inr AB Background and PurposeChronic kidney disease (CKD) has been related to poor anticoagulation control and an increased risk of bleeding. This study aims to evaluate the association between impaired renal function (eGFR 2 points) showed no significant predictive capacity for TTR (AUC 0.528, P=.354). The average TTR was similar for both sexes (P=.255), but with a higher percentage of males subjects with TTR 65% (P=.013).ConclusionChronic kidney disease is associated with poor anticoagulation control in patients with non-valvular AF taking VKA. The SAMe-TT2R2 score was not predictive of poor TTR in the subgroup with CKD, although a modest predictive value for poor TTR was found in those without CKD. PB Wiley-hindawi SN 1368-5031 YR 2017 FD 2017-09-01 LK http://hdl.handle.net/10668/18988 UL http://hdl.handle.net/10668/18988 LA en DS RISalud RD Apr 11, 2025