British journal of haematology
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Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical Trial
Patient self-testing is a reliable and acceptable alternative to laboratory INR monitoring.
SAn ageing population and the continuing expansion of clinical indications for coumadin therapy have increased pressure on hospital anticoagulant clinics. One solution is patient self-testing (PST) of the international normalized ratio (INR) using capillary blood samples on point-of-care coagulation monitors at home. We conducted a prospective study to determine whether patients can achieve accurate INR values through PST, using the CoaguChek S (Roche Diagnostics, Lewes, UK). ⋯ There was excellent correlation between the two methods (r = 0.95), with 85% of CoaguChek results within 0.5 INR units of the laboratory method. On four occasions, differences of >1 unit INR were obtained, but in each case the patient's anticoagulation was unstable (INR >4.5 by both methods) and the differences in INR would not have altered patient management. 87% of patients found self-testing straightforward, 87% were confident in the result they obtained and 77% preferred self-testing. We conclude that PST is a reliable alternative to hospital clinic attendance and is acceptable to the majority of suitably trained patients.