Since home monitors of prothrombin time (PT) may potentially improve the safety, quality, and convenience of chronic anticoagulation management, it is likely that there will be demands from providers, patients, and manufacturers to make home monitors available to VA patients. The rationale for patient self-testing (PST) is that, compared to conventional high quality anticoagulation management (HQACM), it would permit more intense monitoring and increased patient participation in his/her own care, resulting in increased precision in anticoagulation control and thus fewer events of thromboembolism (strokes) and bleeding. The secondary hypothesis is that PST and HQACM will be comparable in terms of health care utilization and cost.
Intervention: Weekly patient self-testing (PST) of prothrombin time by international normalized ratio (PT INR) versus conventional monthly high quality anticoagulation management (HQACM) from an anticoagulation clinic with a minimum two years follow-up. Primary Hypothesis: Compared to conventional monitoring in the clinic, PST of anticoagulation intensity will decrease the number of events of thromboembolism (strokes), bleeding, and all cause deaths and improve the quality of anticoagulation. Second Hypothesis: PST and conventional monitoring will be comparable in terms of health care utilization and cost. Primary Outcomes: Event rates (thromboembolism or bleeding episodes), time to first event, time within therapeutic range for anticoagulation intensity, and total health care cost (including price of PST monitors) and utilization. Study Abstract: Since home monitors of prothrombin time (PT) may potentially improve the safety, quality, and convenience of chronic anticoagulation management, it is likely that there will be demands from providers, patients, and manufacturers to make home monitors available to VA patients. The rationale for PST is that it would permit more intense monitoring and increased patient participation in his/her own care, resulting in increased precision in anticoagulation control and thus fewer events. Original plan was for a study at 32 sites with a total sample size of about 3,200 patients and a length of three years (one for recruitment and two years of follow-up). Final status was 28 sites that randomized 2922 patients in 2.75 years of recruitment with a minimum of two years of follow-up.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
2,922
HQACM with testing every 4 weeks and as indicated for out of range values, medication/clinical changes.
VA Medical Center, Birmingham
Birmingham, Alabama, United States
VA Central California Health Care System, Fresno
Fresno, California, United States
VA Medical Center, Loma Linda
Loma Linda, California, United States
VA Palo Alto Health Care System
Palo Alto, California, United States
VA Greater Los Angeles Healthcare System, West LA
West Los Angeles, California, United States
Time to First Event (Death, Stroke, Major Bleed)
Time to first event (death, stroke, major bleed) The primary outcome was time to first event, and we used the Kaplan-Meier method to compare survival curves and the results using the log-rank test. The number of patients with a primary outcome is what was reported in the NEJM paper. Below is the unpublished cumulative incidence information.
Time frame: Time to event
Time in Therapeutic Range Over Full Length of Follow-up (0 to 100 Percent)
Time in target range (TTR) based on Prothrombin Time standardized to the International Normalized Ratio
Time frame: Full length of follow-up; average of 3 years
DASS at 2 Years of Follow-up
Satisfaction with care was quantified using the Duke Anticoagulation Satisfaction Scale (DASS). Scores range from 25 to 225, with lower scores indicating higher satisfaction.
Time frame: At two years of follow-up
Cumulative Gain in Health Utilities at 2 Year
Scores range from -0.36 to 1.00 per year, with a negative score indicating a state worse than being dead and a score of 1.00 indicating perfect health. Since the time frame is 2 years, the range is -0.72 to 2.00.
Time frame: After 2 years of follow-up for each subject
Health Care Costs at 2 Year
Time frame: After 2 years of follow-up for each subject
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VA Eastern Colorado Health Care System, Denver
Denver, Colorado, United States
VA Connecticut Health Care System (West Haven)
West Haven, Connecticut, United States
Edward Hines, Jr. VA Hospital
Hines, Illinois, United States
VA Medical Center, North Chicago
North Chicago, Illinois, United States
VA Medical Center, Iowa City
Iowa City, Iowa, United States
...and 19 more locations