Literature DB >> 12866610

Hypercoagulable state testing and malignancy screening following venous thromboembolic events.

Steven R Deitcher1, Marcelo P V Gomes.   

Abstract

Mounting interest in hypercoagulability, increased availability of hypercoagulable state test 'panels' and enhanced ability to identify abnormalities in tested patients have prompted widespread testing. Testing for acquired and inherited hypercoagulable states uncovers an abnormality in over 50% of patients presenting with an initial venous thromboembolic event (VTE) but may have minimal actual impact on management in most of these patients. Such laboratory screening should be reserved for patients in whom the results of individual tests will significantly impact the choice of anticoagulant agent, intensity of anticoagulant therapy, therapeutic monitoring, family screening, family planning, prognosis determination, and most of all duration of therapy. Testing 'just to know' is neither cost-effective nor clinically appropriate. The most important testing in patients following acute VTE may be age- and gender-specific cancer screening. Cancer screening following VTE seems most prudent in older individuals and in those with idiopathic VTE and no laboratory evidence for an inherited hypercoagulable state. Cancer screening should focus on identification of treatable cancers and those where diagnosis in an early stage favorably impacts patient survival. Extensive searches for occult malignancy employing whole-body computed tomography and serum tumor markers may identify more cancers but without affecting patient outcome. We advocate that physicians should focus their attention more on VTE prophylaxis and proper treatment and less on costly and, at times, invasive testing of questionable value.

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Year:  2003        PMID: 12866610     DOI: 10.1191/1358863x03vm461ra

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Vasc Med        ISSN: 1358-863X            Impact factor:   3.239


  4 in total

1.  Hypercoagulability in patients with indirect carotid cavernous fistulas.

Authors:  Trishal Jeeva Patel; Kirill Zaslavsky; Patrick Nicholson; Edward Margolin
Journal:  Eye (Lond)       Date:  2021-10-11       Impact factor: 4.456

2.  Venous thromboembolism in pregnancy.

Authors:  Marcelo P Villa-Forte Gomes
Journal:  Curr Treat Options Cardiovasc Med       Date:  2009-04

3.  Pulmonary Infarction due to Paget-Schroetter Syndrome and Nephrotic Syndrome.

Authors:  Laura C Myers; Matthew D Li; Sanjeeva Kalva; Peggy S Lai
Journal:  Am J Case Rep       Date:  2019-11-15

4.  A Giant Right Heart Thrombus-in-Transit: The Challenge of Anticoagulation in Factor V Leiden Thrombophilia.

Authors:  Andrew Chu; Thu Thu Aung; Minni Shreya Arumugam; Mauricio Danckers; Mohi Mitiek; Jonathan Leslie
Journal:  Case Rep Hematol       Date:  2018-09-27
  4 in total

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