Hi
ClickityClack;n878970 said:
Well it looks like my cardiologist is going to be stubborn about sticking with the 1.5 - 2.0 INR range recommended by the surgeon. His office called and said that he had confirmed it with the surgeon.....
I meet with the cardiologist Thursday but I haven't found much published information regarding lower INR ranges...
Does anyone know of anything else that would be relevant, on either side of the issue?
Ok, here's a few hours of my time ... the situation is that there just isn't an off the shelf answer to this question and so one has to cease being an automaton and apply ones own cognition to the findings that have been published.
Ultimately the answer to this question is found in this statement:
"
It should be the goal of the clinician to balance the patients desires for how they are managed with reducing risk to the patient"
So, lets discuss risks (and you can discuss patient desires).
This is the argument I'd make to your cardiologist.
1) there is a lack of evidence to support the idea that long term the On-X protocol is safe for everyone. Fundamentally all studies are about statistical application. If you are "the norm" then "you" fit into their findings. To argue otherwise shows a total lack of comprehension of how statistics works.
2) The studies on INR management targeting the lower than 2.0 have been quite specific with inclusion and exclusion criteria. Has exhaustive testing (or indeed any testing) been done on you to determine if you are inside that criteria? The On-X protocol is not a "law" it is a guideline towards what they believe the lower the safe lower end of the INR range could be for the people in their study who met the inclusion criteria.
3) The evidence we have today shows that INR between 2 and 4 is the safest area I refer you to the study published in this Journal:
http://jamanetwork.com/journals/jama...article/415179
It is a study 4202 patients, quite comprehensive. From that article: [IMG2=JSON]{"data-align":"none","data-size":"full","src":"https:\/\/c2.staticflickr.com\/4\/3868\/14626794599_c646b1872d_b.jpg"}[/IMG2]
so we can see that INR target = 2.5 is not only safe, but gives you ample room for the variations of daily life.
3) while there is short term study on the lack of thrombosis on the patient (such as the PROACT trial and the ESCAT III trial) there is no long term study on the possibility of valve obstrction thrombosis or indeed on the possibility of panus formation (which has been linked to INR being low).
4) The measurement of INR is inherrently fraugh, and while simply expressed as the ratio of (Patient clotting time) OVER (normal clotting time) what is omitted is much. For instance "normal clotting time" varies among the population, what was YOUR un-anticoagulated ProThrombin time? For example were your PT time longer than "average" it would mean that a measured INR of 1.8 would put you much closer to your un-anticoagulated levels ... which is potentially harmful.
I recommend you consider this article as a primer on that topic:
http://www.coaguchek.com/content/int..._time_INR.html
In short there is no evidence that you will increase your risk of harm with increasing your INR target to 2.5 and indeed some evidence that you will increase your risk of harm if you were to persue an INR of less than 2.0 for any length of time.
I'd put that to them
also worth reading is this (a ref to a pdf from my evernote, you can chase the original yourself
https://www.evernote.com/shard/s223/...9880-5-319.pdf