Interesting Analysis of PROACT Trial ON-X lower INR target

Valve Replacement Forums

Help Support Valve Replacement Forums:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.

tommyboy14

VR.org Supporter
Supporting Member
Joined
Mar 17, 2014
Messages
193
Location
London, United Kingdom
Hi Team,

I came across this great website to make evidence appraisal easy for clinicians: NERDCAT

They also have an interesting analysis of the ON-X valve PROACT trial:
https://nerdcat.org/studysummaries/proact
They say (the bold is from their analysis, ie not me):

  • Based on the 95% CI, the absolute risk of stroke/TIA could be as much as 2.2% higher per year, which is far greater than the 1.0%/y non-inferiority margin.
  • In summary, the results of this trial suggest that loosening the INR target from 2.0-3.0 to 1.5-2.0 may increase the risk of the primary outcome by up to 8% over ~4 years.
  • In a population of patients with isolated AVR with On-X mechanical valve at generally low thromboembolic risk, warfarin with a lower INR target of 1.5-2.0 was not as good as INR target 2-3 at preventing thromboembolism when added to ASA. Although this trial demonstrated a 2.3%/year reduction in major bleeding with the lower INR target, it was also unable to rule-out a 2%/year greater risk of thromboembolic events.

For Full disclosure, I have an On-X valve, but my surgeon thought that the quality of the PROACT trial was poor, so advised me very strongly to keep INR at 2-3.

I hope the above critical discussion of the PROACT evidence is helpful when deciding on the Anti-Coagulation regime with the On-X valve.
 
I hope the above critical discussion of the PROACT evidence is helpful when deciding on the Anti-Coagulation regime with the On-X valve.
and some anecdotes from here:

on the low INR protocol "fitting all":
https://www.valvereplacement.org/threads/failure-of-onx-valve-and-problems-with-lowering-inr.878615/
on the outcomes if you happen to attempt to flout that continuously and expecting it to magically protect you because of the advertising:
https://www.valvereplacement.org/th...-compliance-with-an-on-x-aortic-valve.888128/
so to the casual lurker pick the On-X if you wish, pick the St Jude, pick an ATS ... whatever you pick self test, (preferably) self manage and stay on target. Even if you're on target it may need adjustment around your specific case. Plenty of good writings here on how to do that.

Best Wishes
 
Back
Top