Physician Alerts to Prevent Symptomatic Venous Thromboembolism in Hospitalized Patients

Author:

Piazza Gregory1,Rosenbaum Erin J.1,Pendergast William1,Jacobson Joseph O.1,Pendleton Robert C.1,McLaren Gordon D.1,Elliott C. Gregory1,Stevens Scott M.1,Patton William F.1,Dabbagh Ousama1,Paterno Marilyn D.1,Catapane Elaine1,Li Zhongzhen1,Goldhaber Samuel Z.1

Affiliation:

1. From the Cardiovascular Division, Department of Medicine (G.P., E.J.R., S.Z.G.), and Information Systems/Clinical Informatics Research and Development (M.D.P.), Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Mass; Department of Internal Medicine, The Washington Hospital, Washington, Pa (W.P.); Department of Medicine, North Shore Medical Center, Salem, Mass, and Harvard Medical School, Boston, Mass (J.O.J.); Department of Internal Medicine, University of Utah Health Sciences, Salt Lake...

Abstract

Background— Venous thromboembolism (VTE) prophylaxis remains underused among hospitalized patients. We designed and carried out a large, multicenter, randomized controlled trial to test the hypothesis that an alert from a hospital staff member to the attending physician will reduce the rate of symptomatic VTE among high-risk patients not receiving prophylaxis. Methods and Results— We enrolled patients using a validated point score system to detect hospitalized patients at high risk for symptomatic VTE who were not receiving prophylaxis. We randomized 2493 patients (82% on Medical Services) from 25 study sites to the intervention group (n=1238), in which the responsible physician was alerted by another hospital staff member, or the control group (n=1255), in which no alert was issued. The primary end point was symptomatic, objectively confirmed VTE within 90 days. Patients whose physicians were alerted were more than twice as likely to receive VTE prophylaxis as control subjects (46.0% versus 20.6%; P <0.0001). The symptomatic VTE rate was lower in the intervention group (2.7% versus 3.4%; hazard ratio, 0.79; 95% CI, 0.50 to 1.25), but the difference did not achieve statistical significance. The rate of major bleeding at 30 days in the alert group was similar to that in the control group (2.1% versus 2.3%; P =0.68). Conclusions— A strategy of direct notification of the physician by a staff member increases prophylaxis use and leads to a reduction in the rate of symptomatic VTE in hospitalized patients. However, VTE prophylaxis continues to be underused even after physician notification, especially among Medical Service patients.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Physiology (medical),Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine

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