| Literature DB >> 24455235 |
Elisabeth M Battinelli1, Ariela Marshall2, Jean M Connors1.
Abstract
Thrombotic disease is a major cause of peripartum morbidity and mortality worldwide. Development of thrombosis in pregnancy is multifactorial due to the physiologic changes of pregnancy-which induce a relative hypercoagulable state-as well as physical changes leading to increased stasis and also the effects of both the inherited and the acquired thrombophilias. In this review, we discuss the impact of each of these factors on the development of thrombosis as well as the evidence for the impact of pregnancy-associated thrombosis on pregnancy outcome. We then discuss the use of both prophylactic and therapeutic anticoagulation during pregnancy and the puerperium. We review the indications and dosing recommendations for administration of anticoagulation in a context of discussing the evidence including the lack of evidence and formal guidelines in this area. We briefly address the role of the new oral anticoagulants in pregnancy and conclude that significant further research in women with thrombophilias and pregnancy-associated thrombosis may help clarify the management of this condition in the future.Entities:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24455235 PMCID: PMC3880751 DOI: 10.1155/2013/516420
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Thrombosis ISSN: 2090-1488
Risk of VTE in inherited thrombophilia.
| Thrombophilia | OR general population | Annual incidence of first VTE (%) | OR in pregnancy (95% CI) |
|---|---|---|---|
| AT deficiency | 28.2 | 1.77 | 4.69 (1.30–16.96) |
| Protein C deficiency | 24.1 | 1.52 | 4.76 (2.15–10.57) |
| Protein S deficiency | 30.6 | 1.90 | 3.19 (1.48–6.86) |
| Factor V Leiden | 7.5 | 0.49 | Homozygous 34.4 (9.86–120.0) |
| Prothrombin gene mutation | 5.2 | 0.34 | Homozygous 26.36 (1.24–559.2) |
CI: confidence interval.
Incidence of pregnancy-associated VTE with inherited thrombophilia.
| Thrombophilia | Pregnancy (%/pregnancy) | Overall (%/year) |
|---|---|---|
| Factor V Leiden heterozygous | 2.1 (0.7–4.9) | 0.5 (0.1–1.3) |
| Prothrombin gene mutation heterozygous | 2.3 (0.8–5.3) | 0.4 (0.1–1.1) |
| ATIII, protein C, or protein S deficiency | 4.1 (1.7–8.3) | 1.5 (0.7–2.8) |
| Prophylactic | Intermediate | Therapeutic | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Unfractionated heparin | 5000 U twice daily | 10,000 U twice daily | Titrate to PTT 1.5–2.5* control |
| Enoxaparin | 40 mg daily | 40 mg every 12 hours | 1 mg/kg every 12 hours |
| Dalteparin | 5000 U daily | 5000 U every 12 hours | 100 U/kg every 12 hours |
Recommendations for inherited thrombophilia based on assigned risk category.
| High | Intermediate | Low | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Type of thrombophilia | Factor V Leiden homozygous, prothrombin gene homozygous, Compound heterozygous, Antithrombin deficiency, any thrombophilia + history of VTE | Low-risk thrombophilia with a strong family history of VTE | Factor V Leiden heterozygous, prothrombin gene mutation heterozygous, protein C or S deficiency, no personal/family history of VTE |
| Management | Intermediate or therapeutic low molecular weight heparin antepartum and for 4–6 weeks postpartum | Prophylactic dosing of low molecular weight heparin antepartum and 4–6 weeks postpartum | Clinical surveillance antepartum and anticoagulation for 4–6 weeks postpartum |
Adapted from Fogerty and Connors, 2009 [43].