Impact of the VTE-PREDICT calculator on clinicians’ decision making in fictional patients with venous thromboembolism: a randomized controlled trial
Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/35703Date
2024-09-11Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Author
Duijzer, Daniël; de Winter, Maria A.; Carrier, Marc; Cohen, Alexander T.; Hansen, John Bjarne; Kaasjager, Karin A.H.; Kakkar, Ajay K.; Middeldorp, Saskia; Sørensen, Henrik T.; Visseren, Frank L.J.; Wells, Philip S.; Dorresteijn, Jannick A.N.; Nijkeuter, MathildeAbstract
Objectives - To evaluate the impact of predicted individual risks of recurrence and bleeding on clinicians’ decisions on anticoagulation duration and to assess usefulness of the VTE-PREDICT calculator.
Methods - A randomized controlled trial and within-subject study was conducted among clinicians treating VTE patients. The clinicians were asked to complete an online survey containing 6 fictional case vignettes. Group A proposed anticoagulant duration for each case without additional information first and subsequently after seeing calculator-predicted risks (within-subject analysis). Group B was directly provided with calculator risks and proposed treatment duration for each case vignette (for comparison with group A results in a randomized controlled trial analysis). Then, group B received questions on usefulness and credibility of the calculator.
Results - Forty-five clinicians were assigned to group A and 48 to B. Overall, group A did not propose different anticoagulation durations than group B. However, individual clinicians in group A changed proposed duration in 35% of the cases after seeing the calculator risks. The calculator was considered useful and credible by most clinicians.
Conclusion - Overall, use of the VTE-PREDICT calculator did not affect proposed anticoagulation duration. However, individual clinicians frequently changed their proposed duration after using the calculator, especially for patients with high bleeding risk.