AI Article Synopsis

  • This study compares the costs of using heparin versus bivalirudin for anticoagulation in adult patients on ECMO, revealing significant cost reductions with bivalirudin.
  • Both antithrombin (AT) assays and supplementation needed for heparin therapy were found to be major expenses, which were greatly diminished after the transition to bivalirudin.
  • Moreover, patients receiving bivalirudin showed improved survival rates at 28 days compared to those on heparin, indicating not only cost benefits but potential health gains as well.

Article Abstract

Objectives: To assess the wholistic costs of systemic anticoagulation delivery in heparin versus bivalirudin-based maintenance of adult patients supported on extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO).

Design: Single-center retrospective cohort study.

Setting: Large academic ECMO center.

Patients: Adults on ECMO receiving heparin or bivalirudin for primary maintenance systemic anticoagulation.

Interventions: None.

Measurements And Main Results: Electronic data were abstracted from a database maintained by our ECMO center, which transitioned to a preferred bivalirudin-based anticoagulation management in 2017. The pretransition group consisted of 126 patients (123 heparin and three bivalirudin), whereas the posttransition group included 275 patients (82 heparin and 193 bivalirudin). Drug costs were estimated using the wholesale acquisition cost, and laboratory assays costs were estimated using reimbursement fee schedules. Cost data were normalized to the duration of the ECMO run and reported in U.S. Dollar per ECMO day. Following the practice change, bivalirudin patients were less likely to receive AT supplementation (31.0 vs 12.4%; p < 0.0001) and had fewer coagulation assays ordered (6.1 vs 5.4 per ECMO day; p = 0.0004). After the transition, there was a dramatic decrease in costs related to AT assay assessments ($11.78 [interquartile range {IQR}, $9.48-$13.09] vs $1.03 [IQR, $0-$5.75]; p < 0.0001) and AT supplementation ($0 [IQR, $0-$312.82] vs $0 [IQR, $0-$0]; p < 0.0001) per ECMO day. Unadjusted survival at 28 days was higher posttransition (64.3 vs 74.9%; p = 0.0286).

Conclusions: Antithrombin assays and supplementation compromise a significant proportion of heparin-based anticoagulation costs in ECMO patients and is substantially reduced when a bivalirudin-based anticoagulation strategy is deployed. A favorable association exists between the aggregate cost of administration of bivalirudin compared with heparin-based systemic anticoagulation in adults supported on ECMO driven by reductions in antithrombin activity assessments and the cost of antithrombin replacement.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/CCM.0000000000005821DOI Listing

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