Optimal therapeutic range for oral anticoagulants in Japanese patients with prosthetic heart valves: a preliminary report from a single institution using conversion from thrombotest to PT-INR

Y. Uetsuka1, Saichi Hosoda2, Hiroshi Kasanuki1, Masahiko Aosaki3, Kagari Murasaki1, Katsuyoshi Ooki1, Miyuki Inoue4, Etsuko Akiyama4, Masukazu Kitada4
1Department of Cardiology, The Heart Institute of Japan, Tokyo Women's Medical University, Tokyo, Japan
2Sakakibara Memorial Hospital, Tokyo, Japan
3Yokohama National Hospital, Yokohama, Japan
4Central Clinical Laboratories, , Tokyo Women's Medical University, Tokyo, Japan

Tóm tắt

The thrombotest (TT) technique has been widely used in Japan for monitoring oral anticoagulant therapy (OAT). The therapeutic range was originally recommended to be 10%–25%. However, the International Committee for Standardization in Hematology/International Committee on Thrombosis and Hemostasis (ICSH/ICTH) recommended using the international normalized ratio of prothrombin time (PT-INR) for monitoring OAT. It is necessary to use a universal standard measure for monitoring OAT in accordance with the ICSH/ISTH recommendation. We simultaneously measured TT and PT in blood samples from 1 157 patients on long-term warfarin therapy, and studied the correlation between TT and PT-INR. An excellent linear correlation was obtained between TT-INR and PT-INR with the regression equation PT-INR = 1.0420 TT-INR − 0.0987 (r = 0.905, P < 0.001). We also examined the correlation between the incidence of thromboembolism in 170 patients receiving warfarin therapy after prosthetic valve replacement; 50.5% received concomitant antiplatelet therapy. Thromboembolism occurred in 9 of 170 patients during a mean follow-up period of 2.44 years. The average TT values in patients with and without thromboembolism were 26.4% (PT-INR: 1.53) and 21.1% (1.73), respectively (P < 0.01). The incidence of thromboembolism did not differ significantly between patients on warfarin alone (average TT: 22.2%) and those on warfarin and antiplatelet agent (average TT: 20.9%). Our results suggest that the incidence of thromboembolism is low in Japan despite a less intensive regimen having been adopted.

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