1. Clinical monitoring of activated clotting time during cardiothoracic surgery
- Author
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Adrianus J. de Vries, Roland F. Hoffmann, Massimo A. Mariani, Sandra Horsten, and Cardiovascular Centre (CVC)
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,bias ,Wilcoxon signed-rank test ,cardiothoracic surgery ,Activated clotting time ,activated clotting time ,heparin ,law.invention ,Aortic valve replacement ,law ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Cardiopulmonary bypass ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Advanced and Specialized Nursing ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,variability ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Cardiac surgery ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Cardiothoracic surgery ,Cardiology ,Arterial line ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,cardiopulmonary bypass ,Safety Research ,Artery - Abstract
Introduction: The Activated Clotting Time (ACT) is commonly used to manage anticoagulation during cardiac surgery. The aim of this study was to compare the older manually operated Hemochron® Response and the automated Hemochron® Signature Elite. Methods: In this observational study the clinically relevant differences of both devices were investigated simultaneously, using duplicate measurements, in 29 patients who underwent a Coronary Artery Bypass Grafting (CABG) or Aortic Valve Replacement (AVR) in order to determine reliability, bias, and to detect which method has the lowest variation. Blood samples were obtained from the arterial line prior to surgery, after administration of 300 IU/kg heparin, 5 minutes after initiation of cardiopulmonary bypass and successively every 30 minutes, and after protamine administration. Results: A total of 202 measurements were performed. Of these 10 measurements were out of range in the Response and 9 in the Elite. About 27 single unstable magnet errors were seen in the Response versus no measurement errors in the Elite. No statistically significant differences between the Response (p = 0.22, Wilcoxon rank) and Elite (p = 0.064) duplicates were observed. The Response values were consistently higher during heparinization than the Elite measurements (p = 0.002, repeated measurements) with an average positive bias of around 56 seconds during heparinization (Bland-Altman). Overall, the coefficient of variation (CoV) increased during heparinization. Conclusion: The Elite was more reliable, but the variation was higher for the Elite than the Response. The observed positive bias in the Response compared to the Elite could affect heparin administration during surgery making the two systems not interchangeable.
- Published
- 2023