Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Terminated

TerminatedNCT00288808

Comparison Between Point of Care Device and Venous Blood International Normalized Ratio Measurements.

Comparison Between Point of Care Device and Venous Blood International Normalized Ratio Measurements for Pediatric Patients on Anticoagulation Therapy.

Status
Terminated
Phase
Phase 1
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
200 (estimated)
Sponsor
University of Rochester · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
1 Day – 18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Investigate the validity of Hemosense System in pediatric patients on anticoagulation therapy.

Detailed description

Over the last few decades there has been an increased use of Warfarin in the pediatric population stemming from the use of mechanical heart valves and palliative surgical procedures requiring anticoagulation therapy. Other patients with enzymatic deficiency within the coagulation cascade may develop thrombosis treated with anticoagulation, i.e. factor V Leiden deficiency. Prevention of poor outcome from thrombosis has required closer monitoring in the pediatric patient. In addition, absorption of Warfarin in the pediatric population is highly variable and depends on the child's age, weight, diet, and concurrent use of other medications (Desai, 2000). This makes achieving anticoagulation very difficult. "Because of the intrinsic differences in the coagulation systems in children and adults, guidelines for antithrombotic therapy in adults cannot be extrapolated to pediatrics" (Desai, 2000). Therefore, pediatric patients on anticoagulation therapy require frequent lab work to monitor their prothrombin time and international ratios (PT/INR). There are a number of barriers to care when discussing anticoagulation therapy for pediatric patients. Frequent venous blood draws represent a painful procedure that elicit anxiety and fear which leads to noncompliance. In addition, children are more difficult to obtain blood samples because of smaller vessels, patient movement during procedure, and the volume of blood that is required for the test. Other barriers include the time delay from when the patient has the lab work drawn, to when the result get to the provider for any patient care decisions to be made. There are a number of Point of Care devices available for near-patient testing of the PT/InR's that requires only a finger stick. These monitors have been validated against standardized laboratory testing, in order for the monitor to be certified by the FDA. Similar studies to validate finger stick methods in pediatric patients have not been completed. The aim of this project is to validate the accuracy of Hemosense, a point of care device, to venous blood PT/InR level in the pediatric population.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DEVICEHemosense (PT/InR point of care device)

Timeline

Start date
2005-10-01
Primary completion
2006-06-01
Completion
2006-06-01
First posted
2006-02-08
Last updated
2015-04-27

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United States

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT00288808. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.