TY - JOUR T1 - Study protocol for a multicentre implementation trial of monotherapy anticoagulation to expedite home treatment of patients diagnosed with venous thromboembolism in the emergency department JF - BMJ Open JO - BMJ Open DO - 10.1136/bmjopen-2020-038078 VL - 10 IS - 10 SP - e038078 AU - Jeffrey Kline AU - David Adler AU - Naomi Alanis AU - Joseph Bledsoe AU - Daniel Courtney AU - James D'Etienne AU - Deborah B Diercks AU - John Garrett AU - Alan E Jones AU - David MacKenzie AU - Troy Madsen AU - Andrew Matuskowitz AU - Bryn Mumma AU - Kristen Nordenholz AU - Justine Pagenhardt AU - Michael Runyon AU - William Stubblefield AU - Christopher Willoughby Y1 - 2020/10/01 UR - http://bmjopen.bmj.com/content/10/10/e038078.abstract N2 - Introduction In the USA, many emergency departments (EDs) have established protocols to treat patients with newly diagnosed deep vein thrombosis (DVT) as outpatients. Similar treatment of patients with pulmonary embolism (PE) has been proposed, but no large-scale study has been published to evaluate a comprehensive, integrated protocol that employs monotherapy anticoagulation to treat patients diagnosed with DVT and PE in the ED.Methods and analysis This protocol describes the implementation of the Monotherapy Anticoagulation To expedite Home treatment of Venous ThromboEmbolism (MATH-VTE) study at 33 hospitals in the USA. The study was designed and executed to meet the requirements for the Standards for Reporting Implementation Studies guideline. The study was funded by investigator-initiated awards from industry, with Indiana University as the sponsor. The study principal investigator and study associates travelled to each site to provide on-site training. The protocol identically screens patients with both DVT or PE to determine low risk of death using either the modified Hestia criteria or physician judgement plus a negative result from the simplified PE severity index. Patients must be discharged from the ED within 24 hours of triage and treated with either apixaban or rivaroxaban. Overall effectiveness is based upon the primary efficacy and safety outcomes of recurrent VTE and bleeding requiring hospitalisation respectively. Target enrolment of 1300 patients was estimated with efficacy success defined as the upper limit of the 95% CI for the 30-day frequency of VTE recurrence below 2.0%. Thirty-three hospitals in 17 states were initiated in 2016–2017.Ethics and dissemination All sites had Institutional Review Board approval. We anticipate completion of enrolment in June 2020; study data will be available after peer-reviewed publication. MATH-VTE will provide information from a large multicentre sample of US patients about the efficacy and safety of home treatment of VTE with monotherapy anticoagulation. ER -