Elizabeth Marrinan1, Lucia Chen1, David Werring1,2, David Turner1,2. 1. Hyper-acute Stroke Unit, University College London Hospital, London, UK. 2. Acute Stroke and Brain Injury Unit, National Hospital for Neurology and Neurosurgery, London, UK.
Abstract
BACKGROUND/AIMS: Four-factor prothrombin complex concentrate is the first-line treatment in vitamin K antagonist-related intracerebral haemorrhage. Early administration is associated with improved patient outcomes. A quality improvement project investigated delays in prothrombin complex concentrate administration in vitamin K antagonist-related intracerebral haemorrhage in order to reduce the time from computed tomography scan confirming intracerebral haemorrhage to prothrombin complex concentrate administration (scan-to-needle time). METHOD: Twenty patients were identified by retrospective audit over a 3-year period. The median scan-to-needle time for prothrombin complex concentrate was 156 minutes. Several points of delay were identified, including contacting both haematology and transfusion departments for prothrombin complex concentrate dosing and dispensing. Following this audit, interventions were brought in which included the introduction of a protocol with a prothrombin complex concentrate dosing algorithm, negating the need to contact haematology before administration. A dedicated supply of prothrombin complex concentrate was given to the stroke unit avoiding the need to contact the transfusion service. RESULTS: A re-audit showed a 68% reduction in median scan-to-needle time from 156 minutes to 49 minutes. Prospective data collection is ongoing.
BACKGROUND/AIMS: Four-factor prothrombin complex concentrate is the first-line treatment in vitamin K antagonist-related intracerebral haemorrhage. Early administration is associated with improved patient outcomes. A quality improvement project investigated delays in prothrombin complex concentrate administration in vitamin K antagonist-related intracerebral haemorrhage in order to reduce the time from computed tomography scan confirming intracerebral haemorrhage to prothrombin complex concentrate administration (scan-to-needle time). METHOD: Twenty patients were identified by retrospective audit over a 3-year period. The median scan-to-needle time for prothrombin complex concentrate was 156 minutes. Several points of delay were identified, including contacting both haematology and transfusion departments for prothrombin complex concentrate dosing and dispensing. Following this audit, interventions were brought in which included the introduction of a protocol with a prothrombin complex concentrate dosing algorithm, negating the need to contact haematology before administration. A dedicated supply of prothrombin complex concentrate was given to the stroke unit avoiding the need to contact the transfusion service. RESULTS: A re-audit showed a 68% reduction in median scan-to-needle time from 156 minutes to 49 minutes. Prospective data collection is ongoing.
Authors: Lisa Brunton; Camilla Sammut-Powell; Emily Birleson; Ruth Boaden; Sarah E Knowles; Clare McQuaker; Stephen Cross; Natalie Greaves; Kyriaki Paroutoglou; Omran Alzouabi; Hiren C Patel; Appukuttan Suman; Khalil Kawafi; Adrian R Parry-Jones Journal: BMJ Open Qual Date: 2022-04