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CompletedNCT00839657

Clarification of Optimal Anticoagulation Through Genetics

A Randomized, Multi-Center, Double-Blind Clinical Trial to Evaluate the Use of Clinical Plus Genetic Information to Guide Warfarin Therapy Initiation and Improve Anticoagulation Control for Patients

Status
Completed
Phase
Phase 3
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
1,015 (actual)
Sponsor
National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI) · NIH
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Individuals taking warfarin often need frequent dose changes as the international normalized ratio (INR) gets too high or too low which could result in a higher risk of thromboembolism, bleeding and early discontinuation of a highly useful therapy. This study will compare two approaches to warfarin dosing to examine the utility of using genetic information for warfarin dosing.

Detailed description

The objective of the Clarification of Optimal Anticoagulation through Genetics (COAG) trial is to conduct a 1,022 participant, multicenter, double-blind, randomized trial comparing two approaches to guiding warfarin therapy initiation: 1) initiation of warfarin therapy based on algorithms using clinical information and an individual's genotype using genes known to influence warfarin response ("genotype-guided dosing"), and 2) initiation of warfarin therapy based on algorithms using only clinical information ("clinical-guided dosing"). The study hypothesis is that the use of genetic and clinical information for selecting the dose of warfarin during the initial dosing period will lead to improvement in stability of anticoagulation(AC) relative to a strategy that incorporates only clinical information (without genetics) for initial dosing. Each study arm will include a baseline dose initiation algorithm and a dose revision algorithm applied over the first 4 to 5 doses of warfarin therapy. By comparing the two strategies in this trial, the study will be able to determine if genetic information provides added benefit above and beyond what can be gleaned simply with clinical information. This study is a proof-of-concept efficacy trial. Efficacy is defined as a measure of whether, under optimal application, dosing algorithms will lead to improvement in care. The trial will thus answer the question: "can the use of clinical plus genetic information lead to an improvement in anticoagulation control above and beyond the use of only clinical information during the initiation of warfarin, when applied in a uniform and optimal manner to all patients?" Because efficacy has not yet been established for genotype-guided dosing of warfarin, it is important to first test whether this approach can, indeed, improve anticoagulation outcomes under controlled conditions.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
BEHAVIORALGenotype-guided dosing algorithm for warfarinInitial dosing of warfarin for the first 3-4 days of treatment will be determined by an algorithm that uses clinical and genetic information. Following this initiation dose of warfarin, a second dose adjustment will be made after 3 and/or 4 doses of warfarin using a dose revision algorithm that incorporates the clinical and genetic information.
BEHAVIORALClinical-guided dosing algorithm for warfarinInitial dosing of warfarin for the first 3-4 days of treatment will be determined by an algorithm that uses clinical information. Following this initiation dose of warfarin, a second dose adjustment will be made after 3 and/or 4 doses of warfarin using a dose revision algorithm that incorporates the clinical information.

Timeline

Start date
2009-09-01
Primary completion
2013-04-01
Completion
2013-11-01
First posted
2009-02-09
Last updated
2016-04-20

Locations

18 sites across 1 country: United States

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT00839657. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.

Clarification of Optimal Anticoagulation Through Genetics (NCT00839657) · Clinical Trials Directory