The goal of SOAR is to characterize the clinical and economic impact of clinicians' responses to major bleeding complications and pre-procedural concerns for bleeding risk in patients treated with oral anticoagulants (warfarin, anti-Xa orals, and anti-thrombin (IIa) orals) who present to the ED or in the hospital with acute illness or injury, with the eventual aim of informing the development of improved approaches to the management of OACs in the ED.
Purpose and Rationale: Until recently, warfarin was the only oral anticoagulant (OAC) available in the US, and a substantial infrastructure has developed around its management. Over the past five years, four non-Vitamin-K antagonist oral anticoagulants (NOAC) have been approved by the FDA. The NOACs are associated with generally fewer and less severe bleeding complications, and shorter half-lives, often making management of bleeding that complicates the use of these agents less problematic than similar episodes associated with warfarin. Bleeding during NOAC therapy does occur, and patients taking NOACs sometimes require procedures that cannot be delayed, for which good hemostasis is desirable, and therefore the NOAC may delay or complicate care. The challenge of this latter issue is compounded by the lack of readily available, rapid-turnaround quantitative assays for measuring the magnitude of anticoagulation effect associated with NOAC use. From a safety perspective, the large warfarin infrastructure does not translate into useful support for use of the new NOACs; their anticoagulation impact cannot be readily monitored by simple, quick tests. In October 2015 the first specific reversal agent for a NOAC was approved, but it is useful only for dabigatran; at present, there is no specific reversal agent for anti-Xa NOACs. Emergency care providers face many concerns and insecurities regarding the safety of warfarin and the NOACs, while working in a highly pressurized care environment, often with limited patient history and little time to consider treatment options. Because of the unique position of the hospital ED in the US healthcare continuum, it is frequently the initial site of care for patients on OACs who develop bleeding complications. In all clinical settings, there tends to be a standardized, international normalized ratio (INR)-driven pathway for the management of warfarin-related bleeds. Many EDs and hospital pharmacies are now trying to establish similarly standardized, though not evidence-driven, pathways for NOAC-related bleeding, and eagerly await the availability of additional specific reversal agents to use in such patients. The ED represents the key sentinel surveillance point for assessing the clinical and economic impact of bleeding concerns and complications attributable to OAC therapy. Other bleeding issues that impact the pace and nature of medical and surgical care occur in the inpatient setting, especially the ICU and surgical suite. Taken together, the hospital setting (ED plus inpatient) offers a 360-degree view of the scope, significance, and cost of OAC-related bleeds and bleeding concerns. This registry is proposed as a large, prospective, multicenter study that identifies the clinical and economic impact of safety concerns around OAC use on evaluation and management strategies in the ED and on the inpatient units of participating hospitals. The eventual aim will be to use these data to inform the gradual development of a new, protocolized safety standard in the management of OACs in the ED.
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
1,500
observational study of clincians' management of patients taking oral anticoagulants and having acute significant bleeding or requiring management of bleeding risk before an emergent procedure; observation limited to index hospitalization only
University of Alabama at Birmingham
Birmingham, Alabama, United States
RECRUITINGHartford Hospital
Hartford, Connecticut, United States
RECRUITINGHenry Ford Hospital
DESCRIPTIVE: timing endpoints: hours after presentation before any observed intervention
* to include time to procedure/surgery, time to infusion of one of listed medicines (PCC, aPCC, rfVIIa, idarucizumab, tranexamic acid, andexanet alfa \[once approved\]), type of invasive procedure/surgery, delays in procedure/surgery, relation of interventions/procedures performed to the index event, all determined by review of the medical record * type of invasive procedure/surgery (diagnostic/therapeutic), as documented in the medical record * reason for any delay in procedure, as documented in the medical record * procedure attributable to index event, as documented in the medical record
Time frame: index hospitalization, generally less than or equal to (LTE) 7 days
hospital length of stay
to include length of stay (LOS) in ED, hospital, and ICU, as applicable, measured in hours or days per medical record
Time frame: index hospitalization only, generally LTE 7 days
disposition after emergency care
location as documented in medical record: discharge home, admit inpatient (non-ICU), admit ICU, admit observation status, deceased
Time frame: index hospitalization only, generally LTE 7 days
DESCRIPTIVE: blood products utilization: # units
number of units of packed red blood cells, fresh frozen plasma, and/or platelets, as documented in the medical record
Time frame: index hospitalization only, generally LTE 7 days
DESCRIPTIVE: reversal products given (with doses and timing)
as per medical record, the doses and time of administration of any concentrated coagulation factors, prothrombin complex concentrate, idarucizumab, or andexanet alfa
Time frame: index hospitalization only, generally LTE 7 days
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Detroit, Michigan, United States
Beaumont Hospital
Royal Oak, Michigan, United States
RECRUITINGWashington University
St Louis, Missouri, United States
RECRUITINGKings County Hospital
Brooklyn, New York, United States
RECRUITINGThe Cleveland Clinic Foundation
Cleveland, Ohio, United States
RECRUITINGGenesis HealthCare
Zanesville, Ohio, United States
RECRUITINGReading Hospital
West Reading, Pennsylvania, United States
RECRUITINGDESCRIPTIVE: in-hospital complications: incidence, description
to be classified according to surgical/medical risk
Time frame: index hospitalization only, generally LTE 7 days
DESCRIPTIVE: costs of treatment
• to include ED and total hospital costs of blood products/components, pharmaceutical products, cost of procedures (diagnostic, interventional)
Time frame: index hospitalization only, generally LTE 7 days