Guideline-based Consultation To Prevent Anticoagulant-related Bleeding

A Randomized, Controlled Trial in a Teaching Hospital

Abstract

Objective: To test the efficacy of consultation designed to prevent anticoagulant-related bleeding.

Design: Randomized, controlled trial.

Setting: A large teaching hospital.

Patients: A total of 101 patients at increased (> 15%) risk for major, in-hospital bleeding while starting long-term anticoagulant therapy who were identified using a validated prediction rule.

Interventions: Fifty-five patients received usual care under the direction of the attending physician who had initiated anticoagulant therapy. Forty-six patients received guideline-based consultation in addition to usual care. Guideline-based consultation included individualized review of the risks and benefits of anticoagulant therapy and, on the basis of current practice guidelines, recommendations for daily management.

Measurements: The main outcome was in-hospital bleeding, which was classified using a reliable, explicit index.

Results: Major or minor bleeding occurred in 17 of 55 patients (31%) receiving usual care alone, compared with 6 of 46 patients (13%) receiving consultation in addition to usual care (P = 0.03). The protective efficacy of consultation was 58% (95% Cl, 3% to 82%). Consultation was associated with similar reductions in the frequencies of major bleeding (from 13% to 4%) and minor bleeding (from 18% to 9%). Consultative recommendations had an 84% compliance rate and directly affected anticoagulant management: In the consult group, nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory agents were stopped in six patients (13%), and therapeutic ranges were achieved more often for activated partial thromboplastin times (52% compared with 45% in the usual care group, P = 0.08) and for prothrombin times (47% compared with 27% in the usual care group, P < 0.001). Nearly all housestaff and attending physicians (91%) for patients receiving consultation also reported that consultation improved housestaff learning. The consult group had a somewhat lower rate of thromboembolism in the 90 days after discharge (5% compared with 17%, P= 0.06). Death rates and mean lengths of stay were similar in the two groups.

Conclusion: Guideline-based consultation was associated with reduction in the frequency of anticoagulant-related bleeding in patients at increased risk for major in-hospital bleeding.

Article and Author Information

  • From the University Hospitals of Cleveland, the Cleveland Department of Veterans Affairs Medical Center, and Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine, Cleveland, Ohio. For current author addresses, see end of text.

  • Grant Support: In part by grants from the American Heart Association (Northeast Ohio Affiliate), the Research Fund of December 1942, and the National Institute on Aging (Teaching Nursing Home Program Project Grant AG04391). Dr. Landefeld is an American College of Physicians George Morris Piersol Teaching and Research Scholar.

  • Requests for Reprints: C. Seth Landefeld, MD, University Hospitals of Cleveland, 2074 Abington Road, Cleveland, OH 44106.

  • Current Author Addresses: Drs. Landefeld and Anderson: University Hospitals of Cleveland, 2074 Abington Road, Cleveland, OH 44106.

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