Report on the Heparinization Project
Southern California Renal Disease Council, Inc.
ESRD Network 18
PURPOSE: To confirm the impression of some on the Medical Review Board that
single boluses of heparin are used for anticoagulation in many dialysis
facilities in Network 18. If this impression is correct, to determine if any
adverse consequences of this approach can be identified.
BACKGROUND: It is essential to administer heparin to nearly all patients
undergoing hemodialysis in order to prevent clotting of the extracorporeal
circuit during the dialysis treatment. There is no standard of care for heparin
administration in the dialysis setting, but the most recent prevalent practice
is to give a bolus of heparin at the beginning of treatment, followed by hourly
boluses of heparin during treatment. (“Bolus” refers to the starting dose of
heparin at the beginning of a hemodialysis treatment that is not removed from
the patient.) A less common approach is to give a larger bolus of heparin at the
beginning of the treatment. The latter approach has the theoretical risk of
resulting in systemic anticoagulation, and may require closer monitoring to be
certain that excessive coagulation is not occurring. Since 1991, however, with
the advent of CLIA, most dialysis facilities are no longer “certified” to use
the activated clotting time (ACT) or other tests as an on-site measure of
systemic anticoagulation during dialysis. The effects of heparin administration
during dialysis, therefore, are essentially not quantified. Because of the
larger dose of heparin given as a single bolus at the onset of dialysis
treatment, concern has been raised about the safety of this approach when no
laboratory monitoring is taking place.
HYPOTHESIS: Facilities using a “bolus-only” approach to heparin
administration for patients on in-center hemodialysis will be using a
significantly greater total amount of heparin per treatment than facilities
using a “bolus plus hourly” approach to heparin administration.
METHOD: A 20% random sample of all hemodialysis patients in all facilities
during a one-month time frame was drawn, using the last digit of the social
security number. Facilities were asked to submit one hemodialysis treatment
record per patient on their pre-assigned list for the first treatment of the
month of July, 1998. Patients who were excluded from the study included those
who were hospitalized, on vacation, transferred out, or any who were not present
in the facility during that month. Patients who did not have a social security
number, and in the final analysis, patients who had no heparin dosage given
during treatment were also excluded.
The original patient sample drawn was 2981; 2834 eligible forms were returned
from 182 dialysis facilities. A database was set up to enter relevant data per
patient. Indicators were: Bolus (or loading dose) of heparin, hourly heparin
dose, number of hours heparin given, total heparin, time on dialysis, pt.
weight, blood flow rate, type of access, and type of dialyzer.
RESULTS: Patient forms were arranged by company affiliation, then divided
into two major groups: 1) those receiving “bolus only” heparin (defined as
greater than 60% of patient population with no hourly heparin, with the
exception of patients with a catheter access); and 2) those receiving both
“bolus plus hourly” heparin dosages during treatment.
| |
Bolus Plus Hourly (N=1935 patients) |
Bolus Only (N=965 patients) |
| Total Heparin |
9,061,612 units |
4,320,000 units |
| Heparin Mean |
4685 U |
4481 U |
| Heparin Median |
4000 U |
4000 U |
| Maximum dose |
22,500 U |
19,500 U |
| Minimum dose |
500 U |
500 U |
| Standard Deviation |
2295 |
2179 |
A t-test was run on the two groups to test for differences between the means
(the total amount of heparin given during treatment). Using a p value of >.05,
the t-test result showed that there was no significant difference between the
means of the two groups. By observation, although the two groups were different
in size, they had identical median heparin dosages.
Non-statistical facility results were also grouped by company:
| |
Independent |
A |
B |
C |
D |
E |
% units with
bolus only heparin
|
(30%)
| (43%) |
(14%) |
(96%) |
(0%) |
(44%) |
Mean heparin
dosage (initial bolus) |
3200 U |
3350 U |
3000 U |
4450 U |
2200 U |
4300U |
| Mean total heparin |
4600 U |
4100 U |
4400 U |
4750 U |
4100 U |
4900U |
| Mean hours dialysis |
3.27 hr. |
3.36 hr. |
3.26 hr. |
3.27 hr. |
3.20 hr. |
3.09 hr. |
FINDINGS: Overall, the basic hypothesis that there would be major differences
in the total heparin dosages between the bolus-only versus bolus-plus-hourly
patients was disproved in this small study. Corporate policies affected how
heparin was administered, but facilities with the most “bolus-only” heparin
level did not have the highest total heparin levels. Another aspect of this
study could involve correlating mean hematocrits and EPO administration rates of
the facilities with the mean total heparin administration during the same time
period.
DISCUSSION: However, there were many quality-related problems related to
documentation and usage of heparin in Network 18 facilities:
· Many treatment forms had missing information or illegible handwriting.
· Often, there was no correlation between pre-printed prescriptions for heparin
and actual delivered dosages.
· Heparin doses were often written as “cc’s”, not units of heparin, with no
corresponding dilution documented. (It was inferred as 1000 U:1 ml.)
· It was often unclear exactly how much “hourly” heparin was given (or the
number of times) during treatment.
· Many forms did not have “Total Heparin” listed (or at least number of hours
given), or any section for heparin given during treatment. The terms “prime”,
“load” and “bolus” were often used interchangeably (actual dose, or a set-up
only?).
RECOMMENDATIONS: These are quality issues the dialysis facilities in Network
18 should look at internally, as future topics for quality improvement.
The Medical Review Board continues to support efforts of national organizations
to reinstate the ACT test on the dialysis facility level to better monitor
heparin administration for hemodialysis patients.