Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

A Systematic Analysis of VTE Prophylaxis in the Setting of Cancer

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "A Systematic Analysis of VTE Prophylaxis in the Setting of Cancer"— Presentation transcript:

1 A Systematic Analysis of VTE Prophylaxis in the Setting of Cancer
Innovation ● Investigation ● Application A Systematic Analysis of VTE Prophylaxis in the Setting of Cancer Linking Science and Evidence to Clinical Practice— What Do Trials Teach? Program Chairman Craig Kessler, MD MACP Director, Division of Coagulation Lombardi Comprehensive Cancer Center Georgetown University Medical Center Washington, DC

2 VTE and Cancer: Epidemiology
Of all cases of VTE: About 20% occur in cancer patients Annual incidence of VTE in cancer patients ≈ 1/250 Of all cancer patients: 15% will have symptomatic VTE As many as 50% have VTE at autopsy Compared to patients without cancer: Higher risk of first and recurrent VTE Higher risk of bleeding on anticoagulants Higher risk of dying Lee AY, Levine MN. Circulation. 2003;107:23 Suppl 1:I17-I21

3 DVT and PE in Cancer Facts, Findings, and Natural History
VTE is the second leading cause of death in hospitalized cancer patients1,2 The risk of VTE in cancer patients undergoing surgery is 3- to 5-fold higher than those without cancer2 Up to 50% of cancer patients may have evidence of asymptomatic DVT/PE3 Cancer patients with symptomatic DVT exhibit a high risk for recurrent DVT/PE that persists for many years4 Let’s continue examining the association between DVT/PE and cancer. Consider these statistics. DVT/PE is the second leading cause of death in hospitalized cancer patients. Up to twenty percent of all DVT/PE cases occur in cancer patients and up to fifty percent of cancer patients may have evidence of asymptomatic DVT/PE. As I previously mentioned, surgery is a well-known risk factor; however cancer patients undergoing surgery compound that risk to 3 to 5-times greater than surgery patients without cancer. Finally, cancer patients are at higher risk of developing a recurrent DVT or PE following a primary experience than patients without cancer. Ambrus JL et al. J Med. 1975;6:61-64 Donati MB. Haemostasis. 1994;24: Johnson MJ et al. Clin Lab Haem. 1999;21:51-54 Prandoni P et al. Ann Intern Med. 1996;125:1-7

4 Clinical Features of VTE in Cancer
VTE has significant negative impact on quality of life VTE may be the presenting sign of occult malignancy 10% with idiopathic VTE develop cancer within 2 years 20% have recurrent idiopathic VTE 25% have bilateral DVT Bura et. al., J Thromb Haemost 2004;2:445-51

5 Thrombosis and Survival Likelihood of Death After Hospitalization
0.00 0.20 0.40 1.00 0.80 0.60 DVT/PE and Malignant Disease Malignant Disease DVT/PE Only Nonmalignant Disease Number of Days Probability of Death Levitan N, et al. Medicine 1999;78:285

6 Incidence of VTE and Colon Cancer Stage
Days after Cancer Diagnosis Incidence of VTE (%) 7% 6% 5% 4% 3% 2% 1% 0% Local Regional Remote White RH et al. Thrombosis Research 120 Suppl. 2 (2007) S29-40

7 Symptomatic VTE in Cancer Reduces Survival Counterintuitively, Magnitude of Effect on Survival is Greatest with Local Stage Disease Cancer type Hazard ratio (95% CI) for death within one year, cases with VTE diagnosed in year 1 vs. no VTE, by stage Local Regional Remote Prostate 5.6 ( )‡ 4.7 ( ) ‡ 2.8 ( ) † Breast 6.6 ( ) ‡ 2.4 ( ) ‡ 1.8 ( )* Lung 3.1 ( ) ‡ 2.9 ( ) ‡ 2.5 ( ) ‡ Colon/rectum 3.2 ( ) ‡ 2.2 ( ) ‡ 2.0 ( ) ‡ Melanoma 14.4 ( ) ‡ N/A 2.8 ( ) † Non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma 3.2 ( ) ‡ 2.0 ( ) † 2.3 ( ) ‡ Uterus 7.0 ( ) ‡ 9.1 ( ) ‡ 1.7 ( )* Bladder 3.2 ( ) ‡ 3.3 ( ) ‡ 3.3 ( ) ‡ Pancreas 2.3 ( )* 3.8 ( ) ‡ 2.3 ( ) ‡ Stomach 2.4 ( )* 1.5 ( )* 1.8 ( ) ‡ Ovary 11.3 ( ) † 4.8 ( )* 2.3 ( ) ‡ Kidney 3.2 ( )* 1.4 ( ) 1.3 ( ) R.H. White et al. Thombosis Research 120 Suppl. 2 (2007) S29-S40 * p<0.05; †p<0.01); ‡ p<0.001)

8 VTE Associated with Accelerated Death in Breast Cancer Does Symptomatic VTE Reflect Presence or Emergence of Metastatic, Aggressive Cancer? White, et al. Thromb Res,120 suppl. 2 (2007)

9 Recurrent Ovarian Cancer
• 7% symptomatic VTE ( % in primary ovarian Cancer) • 78% of VTE in ROC occur within 2 months of second line chemo regimen: cisplatin-related • Ascites is the only independent risk factor for VTE (HR=2.2) Fotopoulou C et al. Thromb Res 2009

10 Hospital Mortality With or Without VTE
N=66,016 N=20,591 N=17,360 Khorana, JCO, 2006

11 Thrombosis Risk In Cancer
Primary Prophylaxis Medical Inpatients Surgery Radiotherapy Central Venous Catheters

12 Risk Factors for Cancer-Associated VTE
Type Men: prostate, colon, brain, lung Women: breast, ovary, lung Stage Treatments Surgery 10-20% proximal DVT 4-10% clinically evident PE 0.2-5% fatal PE Chemotherapy Central venous catheters (~4% generate clinically relevant VTE) Patient Prior VTE Comorbidities Genetic background

13 Cancer and Thrombosis Medical Inpatients

14 Antithrombotic Therapy: Choices
Pharmacologic (Prophylaxis & Treatment) Nonpharmacologic (Prophylaxis) Low Molecular Weight Heparin (LMWH) Intermittent Pneumatic Compression Elastic Stockings Unfractionated Heparin (UH) Inferior Vena Cava Filter Several classes of agents have been used for prophylaxis and treatment of VTE Nonpharmacologic approaches to prophylaxis include: intermittent pneumatic compression (IPC), elastic stockings, and inferior vena cava filter Most commonly used pharmacologic agents for thromboprophylaxis and treatment of VTE include: unfractionated heparin (UH) (standard, low-dose, or adjusted-dose), oral anticoagulants such as warfarin, and low molecular weight heparins (LMWHs) Oral Anticoagulants New Agents: e.g. Fondaparinux, Direct anti-Xa inhibitors, Direct anti-IIa, etc.?

15 Prophylaxis Studies in Medical Patients
Relative risk reduction 47% Relative risk reduction 63% Rate of VTE (%) Relative risk reduction 44% Placebo Enoxaparin MEDENOX Trial Placebo Dalteparin PREVENT Placebo Fondaparinux ARTEMIS Francis, NEJM, 2007

16 ASCO Guidelines 1. SHOULD HOSPITALIZED PATIENTS WITH
CANCER RECEIVE ANTICOAGULATION FOR VTE PROPHYLAXIS? Recommendation. Hospitalized patients with cancer should be considered candidates for VTE prophylaxis with anticoagulants in the absence of bleeding or other contraindications to anticoagulation. Lyman GH et al. J Clin Oncol (25) 2007; 34:

17 Cancer and Thrombosis Surgical Patients

18 Incidence of VTE in Surgical Patients
Cancer patients have 2-fold risk of post-operative DVT/PE and >3-fold risk of fatal PE despite prophylaxis: No Cancer N=16,954 Cancer N=6124 P-value Post-op VTE 0.61% 1.26% <0.0001 Non-fatal PE 0.27% 0.54% <0.0003 Autopsy PE 0.11% 0.41% Death 0.71% 3.14% Kakkar AK, et al. Thromb Haemost 2001; 86 (suppl 1): OC1732

19 Natural History of VTE in Cancer Surgery: The @RISTOS Registry
Web-Based Registry of Cancer Surgery Tracked 30-day incidence of VTE in 2373 patients Type of surgery • 52% General • 29% Urological • 19% Gynecologic 82% received in-hospital thromboprophylaxis 31% received post-discharge thromboprophylaxis Findings 2.1% incidence of clinically overt VTE (0.8% fatal) Most events occur after hospital discharge Most common cause of 30-day post-op death Agnelli, Ann Surg 2006; 243: 89-95

20 Prophylaxis in Surgical Patients
LMWH vs. UFH Abdominal or pelvic surgery for cancer (mostly colorectal) LMWH once daily vs. UFH tid for 7–10 days post-op DVT on venography at day 7–10 and symptomatic VTE Study N Design Regimens ENOXACAN 1 631 double-blind enoxaparin vs. UFH Canadian Colorectal DVT Prophylaxis 2 475 1. ENOXACAN Study Group. Br J Surg 1997;84:1099–103 2. McLeod R, et al. Ann Surg 2001;233:

21 Prophylaxis in Surgical Patients
Canadian Colorectal DVT Prophylaxis Trial 16.9% P=0.052 13.9% Incidence of Outcome Event N=234 N=241 1.5% 2.7% VTE Major Bleeding (Cancer) (All) McLeod R, et al. Ann Surg 2001;233:

22 Extended Prophylaxis in Surgical Patients
12.0% ENOXACAN II P=0.02 Incidence of Outcome Event N=167 4.8% 5.1% N=165 3.6% 1.8% NNT = 14 0.6% 0% 0.4% VTE Prox Any Major DVT Bleeding Bleeding Bergqvist D, et al. (for the ENOXACAN II investigators) N Engl J Med 2002;346:

23 Major Abdominal Surgery: FAME Investigators—Dalteparin Extended
A multicenter, prospective, assessor-blinded, open-label, randomized trial: Dalteparin administered for 28 days after major abdominal surgery compared to 7 days of treatment RESULTS: Cumulative incidence of VTE was reduced from 16.3% with short-term thromboprophylaxis (29/178 patients) to 7.3% after prolonged thromboprophylaxis (12/165) (relative risk reduction 55%; 95% confidence interval 15-76; P=0.012). CONCLUSIONS: 4-week administration of dalteparin, 5000 IU once daily, after major abdominal surgery significantly reduces the rate of VTE, without increasing the risk of bleeding, compared with 1 week of thromboprophylaxis. Rasmussen, J Thromb Haemost Nov;4(11): Epub 2006 Aug 1.

24 ASCO Guidelines: VTE Prophylaxis
All patients undergoing major surgical intervention for malignant disease should be considered for prophylaxis. Patients undergoing laparotomy, laparoscopy, or thoracotomy lasting > 30 min should receive pharmacologic prophylaxis. Prophylaxis should be continued at least 7 – 10 days post-op. Prolonged prophylaxis for up to 4 weeks may be considered in patients undergoing major surgery for cancer with high-risk features. Lyman GH et al. J Clin Oncol (25) 2007; 34:

25 Central Venous Catheters
Thrombosis is a potential complication of central venous catheters, including these events: Fibrin sheath formation Superficial phlebitis Ball-valve clot Deep vein thrombosis (DVT) Geerts W, et al. Chest Jun 2008: 381S–453S

26 Prophylaxis for Venous Catheters
Placebo-Controlled Trials Study Regimen N CRT (%) Reichardt* 2002 Dalteparin 5000 U daily placebo 285 140 11 (3.7) 5 (3.4) Couban* 2002 Warfarin 1mg daily 130 125 6 (4.6) 5 (4.0) ETHICS† 2004 Enoxaparin 40 mg daily 155 22 (14.2) 28 (18.1) *symptomatic outcomes; †routine venography at 6 weeks Reichardt P, et al. Proc ASCO 2002;21:369a; Couban S, et al, Blood 2002;100:703a; Agnelli G, et al. Proc ASCO 2004;23:730

27 WARP: Prophylactic Warfarin Does Not Reduce Catheter-Associated Thrombosis in CA
Thrombotic Events Warfarin evaluation Dose evaluation No warfarin (n=404) Warfarin (n=408) Relative risk (95% CI, p value) Fixed-dose warfarin (n=471) Dose-adjusted warfarin (n=473) Relative risk (95% CI, p value) Catheter-related thrombotic events 24 (6%) 0.99 ( , 0.98) 34 (7%) 13 (3%) 0.38 ( ,0.002) No catheter-related event 370 (92%) 372 (91%) - 433 (92%) 448 (95%) Not known 10 (2%) 12 4 (<1%) All thrombotic events 38 (9%) 30 0.78 ( ), 0.30 37 (8%) 26 0.70 ( , 0.15) Young AM et al. Lancet 2009;373:567

28 WARP: Prophylactic Warfarin Does Not Reduce Catheter-Associated Thrombosis in CA
Bleeding and Raised INR Warfarin evaluation Dose evaluation No warfarin (n=404) Warfarin (n=408) Relative risk (95% CI, p value) Fixed-dose warfarin (n=471) Dose-adjusted warfarin (n=473) Relative risk (95% CI, p value) Major bleeding and no reported raised INR 1 (<1%) 3 (<1%) - 5 (1%) 7 (1%) Major bleeding and raised INR 4 (<1%) 2 (<1%) 9 (2%) Total major bleeding 7 (2%) 6.93 ( , 0.07) 16 (3%) 2.28 ( , 0.09) Moderate and severe raised INR and no major bleeding 12 (3%) Minor bleeding 14 (3%) 21 (4%) 24 (5%) Young AM et al. Lancet 2009;373:567

29 WARP: Prophylactic Warfarin Does Not Reduce Catheter-Associated Thrombosis in CA
Combined thrombosis and major bleeding events Warfarin evaluation Dose evaluation No warfarin (n=404) Warfarin (n=408) Relative risk (95% CI, p value) Fixed-dose warfarin (n=471) Dose-adjusted warfarin (n=473) Relative risk (95% CI, p value) Total catheter-related thrombosis and major bleeding events 25 (6%) 31 (8%) 1.23 ( , 0.51) 41 (9%) 29 (6%) 0.84 ( , 0.17) All thrombotic and major bleeding events 39 (10%) 37 (9%) 0.94 ( , 0.87) 44 (9%) 42 (9%) 0.95 ( , 0.89) Young AM et al. Lancet 2009;373:567

30 Central Venous Catheters: Warfarin
Tolerability of Low-Dose Warfarin 95 cancer patients receiving FU-based infusion chemotherapy and 1 mg warfarin daily INR measured at baseline and four time points 10% of all recorded INRs >1.5 Patients with elevated INR 2.0– % 3.0– % > % Masci et al. J Clin Oncol. 2003;21:

31 Influence of Thrombophilia on Thrombotic Complications of CVADs in Cancer
In 10 studies involving more than 1250 cancer patients with CVADs vs CA controls: The attributable risk of catheter associated thrombosis conferred by: CA + FVL OR=5.18 (95% confidence interval: ) CA + G20210A OR=3.95 (95% confidence interval: ) FVL 13.5% G20210A 3.6% Dentali F et al. JTH 2007; 5(Suppl 2):P-S-564

32 8th ACCP Consensus Guidelines
No routine prophylaxis to prevent thrombosis secondary to central venous catheters, including LMWH (2B) and fixed-dose warfarin (1B) Revised 2009 NCCN guidelines diverge from this philosophy Chest Jun 2008: 454S–545S

33 Primary Prophylaxis in Cancer Radiotherapy The Ambulatory Patient
No recommendations from ACCP No data from randomized trials (RCTs) Weak data from observational studies in high risk tumors (e.g. brain tumors; mucin-secreting adenocarcinomas: Colorectal, pancreatic, lung, renal cell, ovarian) Recommendations extrapolated from other groups of patients if additional risk factors present (e.g., hemiparesis in brain tumors, etc.)

34 Risk Factors for VTE in Medical Oncology Patients
Tumor type Ovary, brain, pancreas, lung, colon Stage, grade, and extent of cancer Metastatic disease, venous stasis due to bulky disease Type of antineoplastic treatment Multiagent regimens, hormones, anti-VEGF, radiation Miscellaneous VTE risk factors Previous VTE, hospitalization, immobility, infection, thrombophilia

35 Independent Risk Factors for DVT/PE
Risk Factor/Characteristic O.R. Recent surgery with institutionalization 21.72 Trauma 12.69 Institutionalization without recent surgery 7.98 Malignancy with chemotherapy 6.53 Prior CVAD or pacemaker 5.55 Prior superficial vein thrombosis 4.32 Malignancy without chemotherapy 4.05 Neurologic disease w/ extremity paresis 3.04 Serious liver disease 0.10 Dr. John Heit and colleagues have provided some interesting information regarding the risk factors associated with developing DVT/PE based on a very thorough epidemiological study. This study, part of the Rochester Epidemiology Project, looked at all residents in Olmsted County, 90 miles southeast of Minneapolis, Minnesota. The study collected information on every patient that underwent a diagnostic test looking for DVT/PE over a 25 year period. The investigators also looked at all death certificates and autopsy reports to gather further data. Obviously, this was a large study covering a considerable period of time. Over 9,000 patients were included. What you see here are the relative odds ratios of various risk factors or risk characteristics from this study for developing either DVT or PE. Notice that malignancy with chemotherapy carried an odds ratio of 6.53 and malignancy without chemotherapy, an odds ratio of In comparison to other well known risk factors, such as surgery alone, these data indicate malignancy with and without chemotherapy are frequently associated with the development of a DVT or PE. Heit JA et al. Thromb Haemost. 2001;86:

36 VTE Incidence In Various Tumors
Oncology Setting VTE Incidence Breast cancer (Stage I & II) w/o further treatment 0.2% Breast cancer (Stage I & II) w/ chemo 2% Breast cancer (Stage IV) w/ chemo 8% Non-Hodgkin’s lymphomas w/ chemo 3% Hodgkin’s disease w/ chemo 6% Advanced cancer (1-year survival=12%) 9% High-grade glioma 26% Multiple myeloma (thalidomide + chemo) 28% Renal cell carcinoma 43% Solid tumors (anti-VEGF + chemo) 47% Wilms tumor (cavoatrial extension) 4% Otten, et al. Haemostasis 2000;30:72. Lee & Levine. Circulation 2003;107:I17

37 Primary VTE Prophylaxis
Recommended for hospitalized cancer patients Not universally recommended for outpatients, but there are exceptions New data for certain agents Heterogeneous population Need for risk stratification

38 VTE Risk with Bevacizumab in Colorectal Cancer
Approaches Risk of Antiangiogenesis in Myeloma All-Grade Venous Thromboembolism, No./Total No. Tumor Type No. of Studies Bevacizumab Control Incidence (95% CI), % RR (95% CI) Overall 6 155/1196 107/1083 11.9 ( ) 1.29 ( ) Colorectal cancer 3 108/564 85/532 19.1 ( ) 1.19 ( ) NSCLC 1 10/66 3/32 14.9 ( ) 1.59 ( ) Breast cancer 17/229 12/215 7.3 ( ) 1.30 ( ) Renal cell carcinoma 20/337 6/304 3.0 ( ) 3.00 ( ) Naluri SR et al. JAMA. 2008;300:2277

39 Bevacizumab Increases Risk of Symptomatic VTE by 33% vs Controls
Naluri SR et al. JAMA. 2008;300:2277

40 Incidence of VTE: USA and Canada Greater than Israel, Australia, and Europe
rEPO used more in USA and Canada L+Dex: 23% VTE with EPO vs 5% w/o EPO Placebo + Dex: 7% VTE with EPO vs 1% without EPO Multivariate Analysis of the Risk of Thrombosis Associated with Lenalidomide plus High-Dose Dexamethasone and Concomitant Erythropoietin for the Treatment of Multiple Myeloma Treatment Odds Ratio P Value (95% CI) Lenalidomide plus 3.51 ( ) <0.001 High-dose dexamethasone Concomitant erythropoietin ( ) <0.001 Knight: N Engl J Med.2006,354:2079 40

41 Oral Anticoagulant Therapy in Cancer Patients: Problematic
Warfarin therapy is complicated by: Difficulty maintaining tight therapeutic control, due to anorexia, vomiting, drug interactions, etc. Frequent interruptions for thrombocytopenia and procedures Difficulty in venous access for monitoring Increased risk of both recurrence and bleeding Is it reasonable to substitute long-term LMWH for warfarin ? When? How? Why?

42 CLOT: Landmark Cancer/VTE Trial
Dalteparin Dalteparin CANCER PATIENTS WITH ACUTE DVT or PE Randomization Dalteparin Oral Anticoagulant [N = 677] Primary Endpoints: Recurrent VTE and Bleeding Secondary Endpoint: Survival Lee, Levine, Kakkar, Rickles et.al. N Engl J Med, 2003;349:146

43 Landmark CLOT Cancer Trial
Reduction in Recurrent VTE 5 10 15 20 25 Days Post Randomization 30 60 90 120 150 180 210 Probability of Recurrent VTE, % Risk reduction = 52% p-value = Dalteparin OAC Recurrent VTE Lee, Levine, Kakkar, Rickles et.al. N Engl J Med, 2003;349:146

44 Bleeding Events in CLOT
Dalteparin N=338 OAC N=335 P-value* Major bleed 19 ( 5.6%) 12 ( 3.6%) 0.27 Any bleed 46 (13.6%) 62 (18.5%) 0.093 * Fisher’s exact test Lee, Levine, Kakkar, Rickles et.al. N Engl J Med, 2003;349:146

45 Treatment of Cancer-Associated VTE
Study Design Length of Therapy (Months) N Recurrent VTE (%) Major Bleeding Death CLOT Trial (Lee 2003) Dalteparin OAC 6 336 9 17 4 39 41 CANTHENOX (Meyer 2002) Enoxaparin 3 67 71 11 21 7 16 23 LITE (Hull ISTH 2003) Tinzaparin 80 87 8 22 ONCENOX (Deitcher ISTH 2003) Enox (Low) Enox (High) 32 36 34 3.4 3.1 6.7 NS 0.002 NS 0.09 0.09 0.03 0.03 NS NS NS NS NR

46 Treatment and 2° Prevention of VTE in Cancer – Bottom Line
New Development New standard of care is LMWH at therapeutic doses for a minimum of 3-6 months (Grade 1A recommendation—ACCP) NOTE: Dalteparin is only LMWH approved (May, 2007) for both the treatment and secondary prevention of VTE in cancer (NCCN preferred agent) Oral anticoagulant therapy to follow for as long as cancer is active (Grade 1C recommendation—ACCP) Chest Jun 2008: 454S–545S

47 CLOT 12-month Mortality All Patients Dalteparin
10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100 120 180 240 300 360 Dalteparin OAC HR 0.94 P-value = 0.40 Days Post Randomization Probability of Survival, % Lee AY et al. J Clin Oncol. 2005; 23:

48 Anti-Tumor Effects of LMWH
CLOT 12-month Mortality Patients Without Metastases (N=150) 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100 Dalteparin OAC Probability of Survival, % HR = P-value = 0.03 30 60 90 120 150 180 240 300 360 Lee AY et al. J Clin Oncol. 2005; 23: Days Post Randomization

49 LMWH Influences Survival of Patients with Advanced Solid Tumor Malignancies
6 wks LMWH immediately post diagnosis of CA-no initial chemo >6 mos anticipated survival <6 mos anticipated survival Klerk, C. P.W. et al. J Clin Oncol; 23:

50 LMWH for Small Cell Lung Cancer Turkish Study
84 patients randomized: Chemo +/- LMWH (18 weeks) Patients balanced for age, gender, stage, smoking history, ECOG performance status Chemotherapyplus Dalteparin Chemo alone P-value 1-y overall survival, % 51.3 29.5 0.01 2-y overall survival, % 17.2 0.0 Median survival, m 13.0 8.0 CEV = cyclophosphamide, epirubicin, vincristine; LMWH = Dalteparin, 5000 units daily Altinbas et al. J Thromb Haemost 2004;2:1266.

51 VTE Prophylaxis Is Underused in Patients With Cancer
[1/Kakkar. Oncologist.2003/ p381/c1/line A1-A24; p383/c1/line 44-46, c2/line 1-3] [2/Stratton. ArchInternMed. Feb.2000/ p336/c2/line 7-11] [3/Bratzler. ArchInternMed. Sept.1998/ p1909/c1/line A10-A15, c2/line A1-A3] [4/Rahim.ThrmbRes. 2003/p3/c2/line 1-5] [5/Goldhaber. AmJCardiol.Jan.2004/ p261/c2/line 6-8] Cancer: FRONTLINE Survey1— 3891 Clinician Respondents Major Surgery2 Cancer: Surgical Major Abdominothoracic Surgery (Elderly)3 Confirmed DVT (Inpatients)5 Rate of Appropriate Prophylaxis, % Medical Inpatients4 Cancer: Medical VTE prophylaxis is underused in patients with cancer The Fundamental Research in Oncology and Thrombosis (FRONTLINE) survey was a questionnaire distributed globally to clinicians involved in cancer care and accessible on a dedicated Web site1 Data from 3891 completed questionnaires were available for analysis1 The results indicated that 52% of respondents would routinely utilize thromboprophylaxis for surgical oncology patients, and that most respondents only considered thromboprophlyaxis in approximately 5% of their medical oncology patients1 These results can be compared with prophylaxis rates in other patient groups as determined by other recent studies A retrospective record review in 10 US teaching or community-based hospitals of patients undergoing major surgeries (major abdominal surgery, total hip replacement, hip fracture repair, or total knee replacement) showed VTE prophylaxis was used in 89% of patients2 A retrospective record review of patients aged 65 and older in 20 Oklahoma hospitals undergoing major abdominothoracic surgery indicated that prophylaxis was used in 38% of patients3 A retrospective record review at 2 Canadian hospitals of medical inpatients indicated that prophylaxis was used in 33% of patients4 In the DVT-FREE prospective registry of patients with ultrasound-confirmed DVT, among 5451 patients, 42% had received prophylaxis5 [1/Kakkar.Oncologist. 2003/p381/c1/ line A5-A22] [1/Kakkar/p381/c1/ line A23-A24] [1/Kakkar/p383/c1/ line 44-46, c2/line 1-3] [2/Stratton.ArchIntern Med.Feb.2000/ p334/c1/line A14-A19, c2/line A1-A2; p336/c2/line 7-11] [3/Bratzler.ArchIntern Med.Sept.1998/ p1909/c1/line A10-A15, c2/line A1-A3] [4/Rahim.ThrmbRes. 2003/p1/line A1-A12; p3/c2/line 1-5] [5/Goldhaber.AmJ Cardiol.Jan.2004/ p259/c1/line A1-A10; p261/c2/line 6-8] 1. Kakkar AK et al. Oncologist. 2003;8: 2. Stratton MA et al. Arch Intern Med. 2000;160: 3. Bratzler DW et al. Arch Intern Med. 1998;158: 4. Rahim SA et al. Thromb Res. 2003;111: 5. Goldhaber SZ et al. Am J Cardiol. 2004;93: 1. Kakkar AK, Levine M, Pinedo HM, Wolff R, Wong J. Venous thrombosis in cancer patients: insights from the FRONTLINE survey. Oncologist. 2003;8: 2. Stratton MA, Anderson FA, Bussey HI, et al. Prevention of venous thromboembolism: adherence to the 1995 American College of Chest Physicians consensus guidelines for surgical patients. Arch Intern Med. 2000;160: 3. Bratzler DW, Raskob GE, Murray CK, Bumpus LJ, Piatt DS. Underuse of venous thromboembolism prophylaxis for general surgery patients: physician practices in the community hospital setting. Arch Intern Med. 1998;158: 4. Rahim SA, Panju A, Pai M, Ginsberg J. Venous thromboembolism prophylaxis in medical inpatients: a retrospective chart review. Thromb Res. 2003;111: 5. Goldhaber SZ, Tapson VF, for the DVT FREE Steering Committee. A prospective registry of 5,451 patients with ultrasound-confirmed deep vein thrombosis. Am J Cardiol. 2004;93:

52 Conclusions and Summary
Risk factors for VTE in the setting of cancer have been well characterized: solid tumors, chemotherapy, surgery, thrombocytopenia Long-term secondary prevention with LMWH has been shown to produce better outcomes than warfarin Guidelines and landmark trials support administration of LMWH in at risk patients Cancer patients are under-prophylaxed for VTE Health system pharmacists can play a pivotal role in improving clinical outcomes in this patient population


Download ppt "A Systematic Analysis of VTE Prophylaxis in the Setting of Cancer"

Similar presentations


Ads by Google