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THROMBOTIC COMPLICATIONS OF PANREATIC CANCER: A CLASSICAL KNOWLEDGE REVISITED D. L. DUMITRASCU, O. SUCIU, C. GRAD, D. GHEBAN 2 ND MEDICAL DEPT. UMPh IULIU.

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Presentation on theme: "THROMBOTIC COMPLICATIONS OF PANREATIC CANCER: A CLASSICAL KNOWLEDGE REVISITED D. L. DUMITRASCU, O. SUCIU, C. GRAD, D. GHEBAN 2 ND MEDICAL DEPT. UMPh IULIU."— Presentation transcript:

1 THROMBOTIC COMPLICATIONS OF PANREATIC CANCER: A CLASSICAL KNOWLEDGE REVISITED D. L. DUMITRASCU, O. SUCIU, C. GRAD, D. GHEBAN 2 ND MEDICAL DEPT. UMPh IULIU HATIEGANU CLUJ ROMANIA

2 Cluj, Romania

3 Armand Trousseau (1801­1867)

4 Looking for this association and its consequences for clinical practice

5  “In conditions of cachexia, a special state of the blood occurs which predispose to spontaneous coagulation” Trousseau 1865

6 Thrombosis of aorta Jaundice Pancreas CC

7 Pancreatic CC Thrombosis Pancreas

8 longitudinal and transversal section of popliteal vein: recent thrombosis, complete obstruction of popliteal vein

9 transversal section of common femural vein at femural bifurcation: recent thrombosis, complet obstruction (duplex color)

10 Epidemiology  Incidence of thrombosis: in cancer: 5-60%  2x higher in cancer pts vs general population  20% pts DVT have dg cancer

11 Clinical types of thrombosis:  Superficial migratory thrombophlebitis (Trousseau syndrome)  Idiopathic deep venous thrombosis  Nonbacterial thrombotic endocarditis  Intravascular disseminated coagulation  Thrombotic microangiopathy (thrombocitary thrombocytopenic purpura and the hemolitic-uremic syndrome)  Arterial thrombosis

12 Localisation of cancer

13 Pathogenesis Virchow’s triad  Alterations in blood flow  Vascular endothelial injury  Alterations in the constituents of the blood  Patients with cancer : hypercoagulable state >> substances with procoagulant activity: tissue factor, cancer procoagulant

14 Pathogenesis  Hypercoagulability Abnormal coagulation tests Thrombine generated in excess Tumour cells have direct procoagulant effect Tissue factor activate F IX and FX initiating coagulation Tumoral procoagulant: a Ca-dependent cistein-protease

15 Pathogenesis  The factor V Leiden mutation, a mutation of the F5 gene (gene ID: 2153), causes partial resistance of this coagulation factor to the inactivating effects of activated protein C, a protein encoded by the PROC gene (gene ID: 5624)  5% population RR 3-8

16 Pathogenesis  The prothrombin 20210A mutation found to be associated with elevated prothrombin levels  2% population, RR 2.0

17  The endothelial cells may become procoagulant under the influence of proinflammatory cytokinases or other peptides: TNF & IL-1 increase the expression of adhesion molecules for leukocytes, PAF and tissue factor  TNF decreases the endothelial fibrinolytic activity, increases endothelial production of IL-1, increases the expression of thrombomoduline (which diminishes the activation of anticoagulant proteine C). Pathogenesis

18 Other mechanisms  Extrinsec compression  Vascular invasion

19 Trousseau Syndrome

20 PANCREATIC CARCINOMA and DVT  N=202  Venous THROMBOSIS: 108.3 PER 1000 PATIENT-YEARS (~11%)  Thrombosis: 58.6-FOLD INCREASE  CHEMOTHERAPY: 4.8-FOLD  RADIOTHERAPY: 1.0  POSTOPERATIVE: 4.5-FOLD  METASTASIS: 1.9-FOLD Blom et al Eur. J. Cancer 410, 2006

21 CANCER IN 1383 CASES OF PHLEBITIS VENOGRAPHY + Nordstrom et al BMJ 1994 6 mo  ALL CANCER 66 84  Oesophagus + stomac: 3 4  Intestinal 7 10  Liver 5 3  Gallbladder 5 1  PANCREAS 6 2

22 Sorensen et al NEJM 1998  15,348 patients with DVT and 11,305 patients with pulmonary embolism  1737 cases cancer in the cohort with deep venous thrombosis, compared with 1372 expected cases (standardized incidence ratio, 1.3);  Among the patients with pulmonary embolism, standardized incidence ratio was 1.3,  The risk was substantially elevated only during the first six months of follow-up and declined rapidly  40% of patients given a diagnosis of cancer within one year after hospitalization for thromboembolism had distant metastases at the time of the diagnosis  Strong associations with cancers: pancreas, ovary, liver (primary hepatic cancer), brain.

23 Risk of Venous Thrombosis per Type of Malignancy for Patients With a Diagnosis of Malignancy Within 5 Years Before Diagnosis of Venous Thrombosis Bloom et al 2005 Type of Malignancy  No. of Patients/No. of Control  Odds Ratio (95% CI)/Adjusted Odds Ratio(95% CI) No malignancy 1.00 1.00  Men 1279 /1038  Women 1552/ 1024 Malignancy  All hematological cancer 37/ 1 26.2 (3.6-191.4)/ 28.0 (4.0-199.7)  Gastrointestinal malignancies  Bowel 46/ 2 16.8 (4.1-69.1)/ 16.4 (4.2-63.7)  Pancreas 2/ 0 ND ND  Stomach 2 /0 ND ND  Esophagus 2/ 0 ND ND  All gastrointestinal cancer 52/ 2 18.9 (4.6-77.8)/ 20.3 (4.9-83.0)

24 Risk factors  Advanced age  Caucasians  Comorbidities  History of DVT  Location of cancer  First 6 months after cc dx  Metastasis  Recent surgery, current hospitalization, chemotherapy, central venous catheters, sepsis.

25 Prognosis  Poorer in pts with cancer (incl. pancreatic cancer + DVT) vs cancer (including pancreatic cancer without DVT (Alcalay et al J Clin Oncol 2006)

26 Prophylaxis  LMWH 5000 iu once a day (Bergquist et al Br J Surg 1995)  LMWH superior to heparin (Mismetti et al Br J Surg 2001)  Long-term: 4 weeks postop. superior to 1 week (Rasmussen et al Blood 2003)

27 Conclusions  Pts with pancreatic cancer have higher risk to develop thrombotic events  This contribute to their morbitiy nd mortality  These complications should be actively searched in order to improve life expectancy and qol  Thromboprofilaxis of pts with pancreatic cancer refered to surgery or having catheters is very important

28

29 QUESTIONS  Is pancreatic cancer associated with DVT?  YES  NO

30 Shall we screen pts with DVT (recurrent) for occult malignancy including pancreatic cc?  YES  NO


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