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      Performance of prothrombin-proconvertin time as a monitoring test of oral anticoagulation therapy.

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          Abstract

          Outcome and anticoagulation intensity was evaluated during 121 patient years of oral anticoagulant therapy monitored with the prothrombin-proconvertin clotting time (PP, also known as P&P). The PP-based international normalized ratio (INR; PP-INR) correlated well with the INR calculated from the prothrombin clotting time (PT; r = 0.92), and results were almost identical over a wide range after linear conversion (1/INR). When the PP-INR was 4.5 or less, the risk of major bleeding was 1 for every 118 treatment years, but it was 1 for every 73 days when the INR was 6 or more. The 1/PP-INR correlated better with factor II coagulant activity (r = 0.85) than did the 1/PT-INR (r = 0.78). The 1/PP-INR also correlated better with the native prothrombin antigen (r = 0.76) than did the 1/PT-INR (r = 0.68). The PP and PT results correlated better with factor II coagulant activity than with native prothrombin antigen. Thus, the PP clotting time results can be accurately converted to INR. The results also suggest that the PP may have advantages over the PT as an indicator of anticoagulation intensity during oral anticoagulation.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Am J Clin Pathol
          American journal of clinical pathology
          Oxford University Press (OUP)
          0002-9173
          0002-9173
          Jun 1997
          : 107
          : 6
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Department of Medicine, Landspítalinn National University Hospital, Reykjavík, Iceland.
          Article
          10.1093/ajcp/107.6.672
          9169664
          40cad0f2-b90f-4278-830d-0f074643a894
          History

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