Douglas Alexander D, Jefferis Jo, Sharma Rishi, Parker Rachel, Handa Ashok, Chantler Jonathan
Departments of Vascular Surgery, Haematology, and Intensive Care, Oxford Radcliffe Hospitals NHS Trust, Oxford, United Kingdom.
Angiology. 2009 Jun-Jul;60(3):358-61. doi: 10.1177/0003319709332958. Epub 2009 Apr 26.
Patients on intravenous heparin require regular activated partial thromboplastin time monitoring. Laboratory-based activated partial thromboplastin time assays necessitate a delay between blood sampling and dose adjustment. Point-of-care testing could permit immediate dose adjustments, potentially enabling tighter control of anticoagulation.
To assess equivalence of activated partial thromboplastin time measured by conventional laboratory assay and by a novel proprietary point-of-care testing system (Hemochron Response, ITC, Thoratec Corporation, Edison, NJ) among surgical ward patients on intravenous heparin.
A total of 39 blood samples from patients on intravenous heparin were tested with both laboratory and point-of-care assays. Assay equivalence was assessed by Bland-Altman analysis. Results. Point-of-care measurements exceeded laboratory activated partial thromboplastin time by a mean of 15 seconds (standard deviation 19). In 19 cases (49%), the point-of-care measurement would have resulted in different heparin dosing from the laboratory activated partial thromboplastin time.
The Hemochron Response system is not sufficiently accurate for routine ward use compared with laboratory activated partial thromboplastin time assays.