| Literature DB >> 27998897 |
Albert R Dreijer1,2, Marieke J H A Kruip3, Jeroen Diepstraten2, Suzanne Polinder4, Rolf Brouwer5, Frank W G Leebeek3, Arnold G Vulto1, Patricia M L A van den Bemt1.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Antithrombotic therapy carries high risks for patient safety. Antithrombotics belong to the top 5 medications involved in potentially preventable hospital admissions related to medication. To provide a standard for antithrombotic therapy and stress the importance of providing optimal care to patients on antithrombotic therapy, the Landelijke Standaard Ketenzorg Antistolling (LSKA; Dutch guideline on integrated antithrombotic care) was drafted. However, the mere publication of this guideline does not guarantee its implementation. This may require a multidisciplinary team effort. Therefore, we designed a study aiming to determine the influence of hospital-based antithrombotic stewardship on the effect and safety of antithrombotic therapy outcomes during and after hospitalisation. METHODS AND ANALYSIS: In this study, the effect of the implementation of a multidisciplinary antithrombotic team is compared with usual care using a pre-post study design. The study is performed at the Erasmus University Medical Center Rotterdam and the Reinier de Graaf Hospital Delft. Patients who are or will be treated with antithrombotics are included in the study. We aim to include 1900 patients, 950 in each hospital. Primary outcome is the proportion of patients with a composite end point consisting of ≥1 bleeding or ≥1 thrombotic event from the beginning of antithrombotic therapy (or hospitalisation) until 3 months after hospitalisation. Bleeding is defined according to the International Society of Thrombosis and Haemostasis (ISTH) classification. A thrombotic event is defined as any objectively confirmed arterial or venous thrombosis, including acute myocardial infarction or stroke for arterial thrombosis and deep venous thrombosis or pulmonary embolism or venous thrombosis. An economic evaluation is performed to determine whether the implementation of the multidisciplinary antithrombotic team will be cost-effective. ETHICS AND DISSEMINATION: This protocol was approved by the Medical Ethical Committee of the Erasmus University Medical Center. The findings of the study will be disseminated through peer-reviewed journals and presented at relevant conferences. TRIAL REGISTRATION NUMBER: NTR4887; pre-results. Published by the BMJ Publishing Group Limited. For permission to use (where not already granted under a licence) please go to http://www.bmj.com/company/products-services/rights-and-licensing/.Entities:
Keywords: EPIDEMIOLOGY
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27998897 PMCID: PMC5223636 DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2016-011537
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open ISSN: 2044-6055 Impact factor: 2.692
Figure 1Phases during the study.
Antithrombotics*
| Group of antithrombotics (ATC code) | Antithrombotics (ATC code) |
|---|---|
| Vitamin K antagonists (B01AA) | Phenprocoumon (B01AA04) |
| Acenoucoumarol (B01AA07) | |
| Heparin group (B01AB) | Heparin (B01AB01) |
| Antithrombin III (B01AB02) | |
| Dalteparin (B01AB04) | |
| Enoxaparin (B01AB05) | |
| Nadroparin (B01AB06) | |
| Danaparoide (B01AB09) | |
| Tinzaparine (B01AB10) | |
| Direct thrombin inhibitors (B01AE) | Bivaluridin (B01AE06) |
| Dabigatran etexilate (B01AE07) | |
| Direct factor Xa inhibitors (B01AF) | Rivaroxaban (B01AF01) |
| Apixaban (B01AF02) | |
| Other anticoagulants (B01AX) | Fondaparinux (B01AX05) |
*New antithrombotics entering the market are also included in the study when they are introduced in the hospital.
ATC, anatomical therapeutic chemical.
Haemostatic agents*
| Group of haemostatic agents (ATC code) | Haemostatic agents (ATC code) |
|---|---|
| Antifibrinolytics (B02AA) | Tranexamic acid (B02AA02) |
| Vitamin K (B02BA) | Phytomenadione (B02BA01) |
| Fibrinogen (B02BB) | Fibrinogen, human (B02BB01) |
| Coagulation factor concentrates (B02BD) | Prothrombin complex concentrate (B02BD01) |
| Activated prothrombin complex concentrate (B02BD03) | |
| Eptacog alfa (activated) (B02BD08) | |
| Antidotes (V03AB) | Protamine (V03AB14) |
*New haemostatic agents, including specific antagonist of Xa inhibitors or dabigatran, which may enter the market during our study, will also be included in the study when they are introduced in the hospital.
Data collection: content of CRF
| Part | Data content |
|---|---|
| Patient data | Patient ID |
| Date of birth* | |
| Gender* | |
| Weight on the first day of hospitalisation* | |
| Community pharmacist*† | |
| Reason for hospitalisation* | |
| Reason for exclusion | |
| (Co)morbidity* | |
| Day of hospitalisation* | |
| Hospital discharge date* | |
| Any surgery (coded with Verrichtingen code) | |
| Study outcomes | Bleeding (major bleeding and non-major bleeding) event(s) during hospitalisation* |
| Bleeding (major bleeding and non-major bleeding) event(s) within 3 months after hospitalisation‡ | |
| Severity of bleeding complication | |
| Location of bleeding complication | |
| Thrombotic event(s) during hospitalisation* | |
| Thrombotic event(s) within 3 months after hospitalisation‡ | |
| Severity of thrombotic complication* | |
| Location of thrombotic complication | |
| Date of each readmission in the following 3 months after the first hospitalisation*‡ | |
| The reason for readmission‡ | |
| Quality of life (3 months after discharge):†
▸ Age 0–3: no EQ-5D-Y available ▸ Age 4–7: EQ-5D-Yproxy V.1 ▸ Age 8–11: EQ-5D-Y or EQ-5D-Y proxy ▸ V.1 ▸ Age 12–15: EQ-5D-Y or EQ-5D ▸ Age 16 and older: EQ-5D | |
| Adherence by the patient to the therapy; MARS5 (3 months after discharge)† | |
| Patient satisfaction of the antithrombotic therapy; VAS satisfaction scale (3 months after discharge)† | |
| Adherence to the hospital protocol | |
| Percentage of TTR of vitamin K antagonists during hospitalisation and as an outpatient during 3 months’ follow-up* | |
| All-cause mortality*§ | |
| Healthcare costs* | |
| Clinical chemistry data | Laboratory values and the date of determination*§
▸ INR ▸ APTT ▸ PT ▸ dTT ▸ Hb ▸ Anti-Xa ▸ Creatinine ▸ HT ▸ Erythrocytes ▸ Thrombocytes ▸ eGFR ▸ Weight |
| Medication data | Medication use during hospitalisation (coded with ATC code) |
| Use of antidotes: tranexamic acid, phytomenadione, fibrinogen, prothrombin complex concentrate, activated prothrombin complex concentrate, eptacog alfa (activated) and protamine (coded with ATC code) | |
| Use of blood products: blood transfusion and other blood products* | |
| Overview of medication use 3 months before hospitalisation (coded with ATC code) | |
| Overview of medication use 3 months after hospitalisation (coded with ATC code) |
*Obtained from the medical record of the hospital information system.
†Obtained from the patient by using a questionnaire.
‡Obtained by sending a small questionnaire asking for visits to the general practitioner or hospital because of a bleeding or thrombotic event within 3 months after hospitalisation.
§Obtained from the community pharmacist and the thrombosis service.
Anti-Xa, antifactor Xa; APTT, activated partial thromboplastin time; CRF, case report form; dTT, diluted thrombin time; eGFR, estimated glomerular filtration rate; Hb, haemoglobin; HT, haematocrit; INR, international normalised ratio; MARS, Medication Adherence Rating Scale; PT, prothrombin time; TTR, time in therapeutic range; VAS, visual analogue scale.
ISTH definitions of bleeding in patients.
| Type of bleeding | Definition of bleeding |
|---|---|
| Major bleeding in non-surgical patients |
Fatal bleeding, and/or Symptomatic bleeding in a critical area or organ, such as intracranial, intraspinal, intraocular, retroperitoneal, intra-articular or pericardial, or intramuscular with compartment syndrome, and/or Bleeding causing a fall in haemoglobin level of 20 g/L (1.24 mmol/L) or more, or leading to transfusion of two or more units of whole blood or red cells |
| Major bleeding in surgical patients |
Fatal bleeding, and/or Bleeding that is symptomatic and occurs in a critical area or organ, such as intracranial, intraspinal, intraocular, retroperitoneal, pericardial, in a non-operated joint, or intramuscular with compartment syndrome, assessed in consultation with the surgeon, and/or Extrasurgical site bleeding causing a fall in haemoglobin level of 20 g/L (1.24 mmol/L) or more, or leading to transfusion of two or more units of whole blood or red cells, with temporal association within 24–48 hours to the bleeding, and/or Surgical site bleeding that requires a second intervention (open arthroscopic, endovascular) or a haemarthrosis of sufficient size as to interfere with rehabilitation by delaying mobilisation or delayed wound healing, resulting in prolonged hospitalisation or a deep wound infection, and/or Surgical site bleeding that is unexpected and prolonged and/or sufficiently large to cause haemodynamic instability, as assessed by the surgeon. There should be an associate fall in haemoglobin level of at least 20 g/L (1.24 mmol/L), or transfusion, indicated by the bleeding, of at least two units of whole blood or red cells, with temporal association within 24 hours to the bleeding. |
| Non-major bleeding | All bleeding events that do not meet the ISTH criteria according to which major bleeding is defined |
ISTH, International Society of Thrombosis and Haemostasis.
Definition of thrombotic events
| Arterial or venous thrombosis | Definition of the arterial or venous thrombosis |
|---|---|
| Acute myocardial infarction | Detection of a rise and/or fall of cardiac biomarker values (preferably cTn) with at least one value above the 99th centile URL and with at least one of the following:
Symptoms of ischaemia New or presumed new significant ST–T changes or new LBBB Development of pathological Q waves in the ECG Imaging evidence of new loss of viable myocardium or new regional wall motion abnormality Identification of an intracoronary thrombus by angiography or autopsy |
| Stroke | An embolic, thrombotic or stroke with motor, sensory or cognitive dysfunction (such as hemiplegia, hemiparesis, aphasia, sensory deficit, impaired memory) that persisted for 24 or more hours |
| Deep venous thrombosis | An acute vascular occlusion of an extremity or organ, documented by means of imaging, surgery or autopsy |
| Pulmonary embolism | The presence of a blood clot in a pulmonary artery with subsequent obstruction of blood supply to the lung parenchyma or if the patient had a ventilation-perfusion scan interpreted as high probability of pulmonary embolism or a positive result on spiral CT, transoesophageal echocardiography, pulmonary arteriography or CT angiography |
| Any objectively determined arterial or venous thrombus | Non-cerebral, non-cardiac arterial thrombotic or embolic events |
cTn, cardiac troponin; LBBB, left bundle branch block; ST–T, ST segment–T wave; URL, upper reference limit.