Patients who receive a mechanical heart valve to replace a diseased heart valve must take an anticoagulation medicine the rest of their lives, and monitor their level of anticoagulation. Until recently, the testing of the level of anticoagulation was performed at medical laboratories or hospitals. The purpose of this study is to see if patients who test their level of anticoagulation by themselves at home and then call their doctor with the result have better control of their anticoagulation as compared to patients whose anticoagulation is checked only by their physician.
Prosthetic replacement of diseased heart valves is a routine procedure, and mechanical heart valves have excellent hemodynamic performance and durability. However, mechanical valves are thrombogenic, necessitating lifelong anticoagulation. Hazards of anticoagulation include bleeding when it is excessive or thromboembolism when the intensity of anticoagulation is below the recommended level. Monitoring the level of anticoagulation is accomplished by analyzing the International Normalized Ratio. Until recently, this was performed at medical laboratories or hospitals, but recent literature suggests that patient self-testing of oral anticoagulation improves patient compliance, medical outcomes, and quality of life. The objective of this study is to evaluate the time in therapeutic range of patients who self-test their INR compared to patients receiving the usual care. Additionally, we will evaluate the educational components and corollaries of self-testing. Two hundred consecutively enrolled adults, having undergone implantation of a mechanical heart valve, will be randomized to either self-testing or usual care. Those randomized to the self-testing group will undergo self-testing instruction prior to hospital dismissal. For three months after hospital discharge, subject will record their INR results obtained by self-testing or as prescribed by their primary physician. They will then submit the record of the INR results and complete a survey.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
DIAGNOSTIC
Masking
TRIPLE
Home testing monitor to test patients INR by placing a capillary drop of blood from the finger onto a test strip. The test strip is then inserted into the INRatio point-of-care self-testing coagulometer. After approximately 2 minutes of analysis, the INR value will be presented on the meter's display.
Usual care is defined as that care currently received by patients into whom mechanical heart valves are placed. Typically, these patients undergo frequent checks of their INR level until the therapeutic range is achieved. Then periodic INR levels are drawn at the discretion of the managing physician.
Saint Marys Hospital
Rochester, Minnesota, United States
Mean Percentage of Time in Therapeutic Range
Time frame: baseline to 3 months
Mean Percentage of INR Tests Within the Therapeutic Range
Time frame: baseline to 3 months
Mean Number of INR Tests Performed
Time frame: baseline to 3 months
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Enrollment
200