Kahn Susan R, Morrison David R, Diendéré Gisèle, Piché Alexandre, Filion Kristian B, Klil-Drori Adi J, Douketis James D, Emed Jessica, Roussin André, Tagalakis Vicky, Morris Martin, Geerts William
Department of Epidemiology, Biostatistics and Occupational Health, McGill University, Montreal, Canada.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2018 Apr 24;4(4):CD008201. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD008201.pub3.
Venous thromboembolism (VTE) is a leading cause of morbidity and mortality in hospitalized patients. While numerous randomized controlled trials (RCTs) have shown that the appropriate use of thromboprophylaxis in hospitalized patients at risk for VTE is safe, effective, and cost-effective, thromboprophylaxis remains underused or inappropriately used. Our previous review suggested that system-wide interventions, such as education, alerts, and multifaceted interventions were more effective at improving the prescribing of thromboprophylaxis than relying on individual providers' behaviors. However, 47 of the 55 included studies in our previous review were observational in design. Thus, an update to our systematic review, focused on the higher level of evidence of RCTs only, was warranted.
To assess the effects of system-wide interventions designed to increase the implementation of thromboprophylaxis and decrease the incidence of VTE in hospitalized adult medical and surgical patients at risk for VTE, focusing on RCTs only.
Our research librarian conducted a systematic literature search of MEDLINE Ovid, and subsequently translated it to CENTRAL, PubMed, Embase Ovid, BIOSIS Previews Ovid, CINAHL, Web of Science, the Database of Abstracts of Reviews of Effects (DARE; in the Cochrane Library), NHS Economic Evaluation Database (EED; in the Cochrane Library), LILACS, and clinicaltrials.gov from inception to 7 January 2017. We also screened reference lists of relevant review articles. We identified 12,920 potentially relevant records.
We included all types of RCTs, with random or quasi-random methods of allocation of interventions, which either randomized individuals (e.g. parallel group, cross-over, or factorial design RCTs), or groups of individuals (cluster RCTs (CRTs)), which aimed to increase the use of prophylaxis or appropriate prophylaxis, or decrease the occurrence of VTE in hospitalized adult patients. We excluded observational studies, studies in which the intervention was simply distribution of published guidelines, and studies whose interventions were not clearly described. Studies could be in any language.
We collected data on the following outcomes: the number of participants who received prophylaxis or appropriate prophylaxis (as defined by study authors), the occurrence of any VTE (symptomatic or asymptomatic), mortality, and safety outcomes, such as bleeding. We categorized the interventions into alerts (computer or human alerts), multifaceted interventions (combination of interventions that could include an alert component), educational interventions (e.g. grand rounds, courses), and preprinted orders (written predefined orders completed by the physician on paper or electronically). We meta-analyzed data across RCTs using a random-effects model. For CRTs, we pooled effect estimates (risk difference (RD) and risk ratio (RR), with 95% confidence interval (CI), adjusted for clustering, when possible. We pooled results if three or more trials were available for a particular intervention. We assessed the certainty of the evidence according to the GRADE approach.
From the 12,920 records identified by our search, we included 13 RCTs (N = 35,997 participants) in our qualitative analysis and 11 RCTs (N = 33,207 participants) in our meta-analyses.
Alerts were associated with an increase in the proportion of participants who received prophylaxis (RD 21%, 95% CI 15% to 27%; three studies; 5057 participants; I² = 75%; low-certainty evidence). The substantial statistical heterogeneity may be in part explained by patient types, type of hospital, and type of alert. Subgroup analyses were not feasible due to the small number of studies included in the meta-analysis.Multifaceted interventions were associated with a small increase in the proportion of participants who received prophylaxis (cluster-adjusted RD 4%, 95% CI 2% to 6%; five studies; 9198 participants; I² = 0%; moderate-certainty evidence). Multifaceted interventions with an alert component were found to be more effective than multifaceted interventions that did not include an alert, although there were not enough studies to conduct a pooled analysis.
Alerts were associated with an increase in the proportion of participants who received appropriate prophylaxis (RD 16%, 95% CI 12% to 20%; three studies; 1820 participants; I² = 0; moderate-certainty evidence). Alerts were also associated with a reduction in the rate of symptomatic VTE at three months (RR 64%, 95% CI 47% to 86%; three studies; 5353 participants; I² = 15%; low-certainty evidence). Computer alerts were associated with a reduction in the rate of symptomatic VTE, although there were not enough studies to pool computer alerts and human alerts results separately.
AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: We reviewed RCTs that implemented a variety of system-wide strategies aimed at improving thromboprophylaxis in hospitalized patients. We found increased prescription of prophylaxis associated with alerts and multifaceted interventions, and increased prescription of appropriate prophylaxis associated with alerts. While multifaceted interventions were found to be less effective than alerts, a multifaceted intervention with an alert was more effective than one without an alert. Alerts, particularly computer alerts, were associated with a reduction in symptomatic VTE at three months, although there were not enough studies to pool computer alerts and human alerts results separately.Our analysis was underpowered to assess the effect on mortality and safety outcomes, such as bleeding.The incomplete reporting of relevant study design features did not allow complete assessment of the certainty of the evidence. However, the certainty of the evidence for improvement in outcomes was judged to be better than for our previous review (low- to moderate-certainty evidence, compared to very low-certainty evidence for most outcomes). The results of our updated review will help physicians, hospital administrators, and policy makers make practical decisions about adopting specific system-wide measures to improve prescription of thromboprophylaxis, and ultimately prevent VTE in hospitalized patients.
静脉血栓栓塞症(VTE)是住院患者发病和死亡的主要原因。虽然众多随机对照试验(RCT)表明,对有VTE风险的住院患者适当使用血栓预防措施是安全、有效且具有成本效益的,但血栓预防措施仍未得到充分利用或使用不当。我们之前的综述表明,全系统干预措施,如教育、警报和多方面干预,在改善血栓预防措施的处方方面比依赖个体医疗服务提供者的行为更有效。然而,我们之前综述纳入的55项研究中有47项为观察性设计。因此,有必要对我们的系统综述进行更新,仅关注RCT的更高证据水平。
评估旨在增加血栓预防措施的实施并降低有VTE风险的住院成年内科和外科患者VTE发生率的全系统干预措施的效果,仅关注RCT。
我们的研究馆员对MEDLINE Ovid进行了系统文献检索,随后将其转换为CENTRAL、PubMed、Embase Ovid、BIOSIS Previews Ovid、CINAHL、Web of Science、效果综述摘要数据库(DARE;在Cochrane图书馆中)、英国国家医疗服务体系经济评估数据库(EED;在Cochrane图书馆中)、拉丁美洲和加勒比卫生科学数据库(LILACS)以及clinicaltrials.gov进行检索,检索时间从数据库建立至2017年1月7日。我们还筛选了相关综述文章的参考文献列表。我们共识别出12920条潜在相关记录。
我们纳入了所有类型的RCT,采用随机或准随机的干预分配方法,这些研究要么将个体随机分组(如平行组、交叉或析因设计RCT),要么将个体组随机分组(整群RCT(CRT)),旨在增加预防措施或适当预防措施的使用,或降低住院成年患者VTE的发生率。我们排除了观察性研究、干预措施仅为分发已发表指南的研究以及干预措施未明确描述的研究。研究可以使用任何语言。
我们收集了以下结局的数据:接受预防措施或适当预防措施(由研究作者定义)的参与者数量、任何VTE(有症状或无症状)的发生情况、死亡率以及安全性结局,如出血情况。我们将干预措施分为警报(计算机或人工警报)、多方面干预(可能包括警报成分的干预组合)、教育干预(如大查房、课程)和预印医嘱(医生在纸上或电子方式完成的书面预定义医嘱)。我们使用随机效应模型对RCT的数据进行荟萃分析。对于CRT,我们合并效应估计值(风险差异(RD)和风险比(RR),并在可能的情况下对聚类进行调整,给出95%置信区间(CI)。如果针对特定干预措施有三项或更多试验,我们将合并结果。我们根据GRADE方法评估证据的确定性。
在我们检索到的12920条记录中,我们纳入了13项RCT(N = 35997名参与者)进行定性分析,11项RCT(N = 33207名参与者)进行荟萃分析。
警报与接受预防措施的参与者比例增加相关(RD 21%,95% CI 15%至27%;三项研究;5057名参与者;I² = 75%;低确定性证据)。显著的统计学异质性可能部分由患者类型、医院类型和警报类型解释。由于荟萃分析中纳入的研究数量较少,亚组分析不可行。多方面干预与接受预防措施的参与者比例小幅增加相关(聚类调整后的RD 4%,95% CI 2%至6%;五项研究;9198名参与者;I² = 0%;中等确定性证据)。发现包含警报成分的多方面干预比不包含警报的多方面干预更有效,尽管没有足够的研究进行合并分析。
警报与接受适当预防措施的参与者比例增加相关(RD 16%,95% CI 12%至20%;三项研究;1820名参与者;I² = 0;中等确定性证据)。警报还与三个月时有症状VTE的发生率降低相关(RR 64%,95% CI 47%至86%;三项研究;5353名参与者;I² = 15%;低确定性证据)。计算机警报与有症状VTE的发生率降低相关,尽管没有足够的研究分别合并计算机警报和人工警报的结果。
我们回顾了实施各种旨在改善住院患者血栓预防措施的全系统策略的RCT。我们发现警报和多方面干预与预防措施处方增加相关,警报与适当预防措施处方增加相关。虽然发现多方面干预不如警报有效,但包含警报的多方面干预比不包含警报的更有效。警报,特别是计算机警报,与三个月时有症状VTE的发生率降低相关,尽管没有足够的研究分别合并计算机警报和人工警报的结果。我们的分析在评估对死亡率和安全性结局(如出血)的影响方面能力不足。相关研究设计特征的报告不完整,无法完全评估证据的确定性。然而,结局改善的证据确定性被认为比我们之前的综述更好(低至中等确定性证据,而之前大多数结局的证据确定性为极低)。我们更新综述的结果将有助于医生、医院管理人员和政策制定者就是否采用特定的全系统措施来改善血栓预防措施的处方做出实际决策,并最终预防住院患者的VTE。