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Three Phases of Thrombotic Events of the Lower Extremity

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Presentation on theme: "Three Phases of Thrombotic Events of the Lower Extremity"— Presentation transcript:

1 Three Phases of Thrombotic Events of the Lower Extremity
Phase 1 – Prevention Marlin W. Schul, MD, RVT, FACPh Medical Director, Owner – Lafayette Regional Vein & Laser Center

2 Vein Facts - Present 10x persons suffer from venous insufficiency vs. PAD All age groups may be affected Stasis Ulcers affect 500,000 persons 20,000 new stasis ulcers/year

3 Vein Facts - Present VTE occurs in 1/20 persons over lifetime
>500,000 are hospitalized for DVT/PE each year Fatal PE represents the 3rd most common cause of death among hospitalized patients.

4 Vein Facts - Present DVT and PE are preventable!
Studies have shown >40% of cases failed to receive prophylaxis.* Patients surviving VTE +/- PE are plagued with chronic pain and swelling *Spyropoulos A. “Emerging Strategies in the Prevention of Venous Thromboembolism in Hospitalized Medical Patients.” Chest 2005; 128:

5 Vein Facts - Present REITE Registry over 30,000 DVT JAMA Oct/2013
77% occur following hosp. D/C 55% happen after proph. D/C DVT risk rises over 100 days after ortho surgery Median time to VTE event 74 days after hospitalization JAMA Oct/2013 Paradoxical findings Increased prophylaxis/Inc. incidence Increased surveillance/Inc. incidence

6 Vein Facts - Present In 2005, US Senate passed a resolution declaring the month of March as National DVT Awareness Month Joint Commission and CMS have declared VTE as a area of concern NEVER EVENTS!

7 The Burden of DVT

8 Population-Based Studies: High Incidence of VTE

9 VTE: An Important Problem Among Hospital Patients

10 Percentage of Patients at Risk for VTE by Country

11 Percentage of At-Risk Patients Receiving Recommended Prophylaxis

12 Pulmonary Embolism Carries a High Mortality Rate

13 Poor Clinical Outcomes After VTE Treatment

14 The Natural History of Acute DVT
DVT is a chronic disease of coagulation Early natural history is a dynamic balance between Recanalization Greatest change in thrombus burden occurs over first 3-6 months 55% with complete recanalization at 6 months Recurrent thrombotic events Late natural history dominated by recurrent VTE Underlying thrombotic risk factors Extent of recanalization Degree of active coagulation Long-term outcomes related to natural history Rapid recanalization protects valve function Recurrent DVT predicts reflux & PTS

15 Pre-test Question 1 The three tenets of Virchow's triad carry equal weight. A) True B) False

16 Pathophysiology of VTE
Vessel Injury Stasis Virchow’s Triad Hypercoagulability Congenital Acquired Situational Combined FVL APL Antibodies Surgery Elev. Homocys. C20210A Malignancy Trauma Elev. F VIII Protein C & S Adv. Age Pregnancy AT III OCP/HRT

17 Venous Thrombosis: a multi-causal disease Rosendaal FR, Lancet 1999
Risk Factors are SYNERGISTIC NOT ADDITIVE Oral contraceptives + FVL = X risk Surgery (1.6%) + ATIII (0.8%) = 12.7%/yr Risk Curve Age Thrombotic Potential FVL OCP Time

18 Background Use slide with Virchow's triad and assymmetry of effect

19 Case #1 47YOWM has left lower extremity arthroscopy because of knee pain and inability to competitively play basketball with his sons. What VTE risk factors does this patient possess?

20 Case #1 3 days after scope procedure limb is swollen and painful. He visits his ortho doc three times over a 9 month period and was told everyone has swelling and it will just take time. LLE Duplex Exam: Noncompressible FV from proximal FV to POPV; No evidence of superficial or deep vein reflux; High antegrade flow of the great saphenous vein Could this have been prevented?

21 Case #1 LLE Duplex Exam: Noncompressible FV from proximal FV to POPV;
No evidence of superficial or deep vein reflux; High antegrade flow of the great saphenous vein Text box…. Could this event have possibly been prevented?

22 Background Epidemic Most preventable cause of hospital death
Surgeon General Focus CMS Focus – 'Never Events' Hospitalized subjects vs. outpatient risk assessment Is risk the same? Medical patients vs. Surgical patients? Risk to whom? Fatal PE image

23 Pre-test Question 2 Which of the following statements of compression therapy is true? A) Compression increases flow rates of the deep venous system; B) Compression is proven to reduce occupational edema; C) Calf high mmHg stockings are proven to reduce the incidence of post-thrombotic syndrome by 50%; D) TED stockings have proven benefit in nonambulatory subjects; E) All of the above

24 Start with Healthy Vein Habits
Ambulation/Active Lifestyle Avoid prolonged sitting or standing Target 10k steps per day Compression Therapy Increase flow velocities of DVS Minimize occupational hazards Maintaining Normal Weight BMI 40+ increases VTE Risk 3-fold

25 Role of Compression Therapy
Reduce complication rates and symptoms following acute DVT Reduce the incidence of PTS by 50% when worn in acute DVT for two years (article image) Reduces occupational edema Enhances ulcer healing rates Primary treatment for lymphedema subjects

26 Individualized Risk Assessment: Caprini Score

27 Risk Assessment In Practice?
Outpatient Medical/Surgical Inpatient Considerations Primary care tool for patients concerned with this risk; Pre-surgical risk assessment tool, and guide to safe propylaxis. All patients carry risk, yet risk varies and cannot be seen by the naked eye;

28 Risk Assessment in Practice

29 Risk Assessment in Practice

30 Overall Risk/Benefit Analysis
Risks without individual assessment Benefits of individual assessment Subjects with risk fail to be identified – life/limb threatening events occur Subjects without risk may be at risk with prophylactic doses of LMWH Medicolegal consequences Failure to treat Economic consequences Never events, etc. Appropriate risk stratification protects patients without risk, and identifies subjects with risk that need extra care because of risk Recongized as a best practice CMS Measures are met PQRS credits are met Lower event rates/Lower readmission rates

31 Value of Individualized Risk Stratification
Identify At-Risk Individuals Protect based upon risk Ambulation Compression Anticoagulation Recognize events will still occur Frequency of events will decline Boston University U of Michigan Texas Health Resources

32 Risk Stratification? Early Ambulation SCD's Either
Low Risk Priorities – Caprini Risk Assessment Score <3 Moderate Risk Priorities – Caprini Assessment Score 3-4 Early Ambulation SCD's Either Early ambulation & SCDs OR SCD's and pharmacological prophylaxis

33 Risk Stratification? SCDs and appropriate pharmacologic prophylaxis
High Risk Subjects with Caprini Score 5 or greater Subjects w/High Caprini Scores and High Bleeding Risks SCDs and appropriate pharmacologic prophylaxis LMWH (Best Practice) Heparin (alternative to LMWH) Xa Inhibitor (Total Joint procedures) Challenging situation yet more information is known by risk assessment Options IVC Filter placement Compression/Ambulation

34 Caprini Score In Action
Validated Surgical setting SICU setting Hospitalized patients ENT Surgery Plastic Surgery Highly Sensitive Scoring System must be balanced by bleeding risk.

35 Challenges Identifying Individual risk
Education needs EPIC Platform to facilitate Evidence Based Recommendations Simplified Order Sets Local Thresholds for Intervention Post hospitalization risk exists Identifying patients at risk will help facilitate extended prophylaxis when indicated.

36 What’s Next on September 11, 2015
Phase 2 – Acute VTE Management (Focus on DVT Lower Extremity) Phase 3 – Preventing Long-term Complications of PTS/Recurrent DVT


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