| Literature DB >> 25366189 |
A J Muñoz Martín1, C Font Puig, L M Navarro Martín, P Borrega García, M Martín Jiménez.
Abstract
Venous thromboembolism (VTE) is a common event in cancer patients and one of the major causes of cancer-associated mortality and a leading cause of morbidity. In recent years, the incidence rates of VTE have notably increased; however, VTE is still commonly underestimated by oncologists. VTE is considered an adverse prognostic factor in cancer patients in all settings. In 2011 the Spanish Society of Medical Oncology (SEOM) first published a clinical guideline of prophylaxis and treatment of VTE in cancer patients. In an effort to incorporate evidence obtained since the original publication, SEOM presents an update of the guideline for thrombosis and cancer in order to improve the prevention and management of VTE.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25366189 PMCID: PMC4239786 DOI: 10.1007/s12094-014-1238-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Transl Oncol ISSN: 1699-048X Impact factor: 3.405
Risk factors for VTE
| Cancer-related |
| Site |
| Very high risk: pancreas, brain, stomach |
| High risk: lung, kidney, colon, uterus, bladder, testicular tumor |
| Low risk: prostate, breast |
| Stage/metastatic disease |
| Higher for metastatic disease over locally advanced or local disease |
| Histology |
| Higher for adenocarcinoma over squamous cell carcinoma |
| Tumor grade |
| Higher for high-grade tumors (grade 3–4) compared to low grade (grade 1–2) |
| Initial period after diagnosis (3–6 months) |
| Active disease |
| Vascular compression due to tumoral mass or lymphadenopathy |
| Treatment-related |
| Chemotherapy |
| Cisplatin |
| Surgery |
| Hospitalization |
| Hormonal treatment |
| Indwelling catheters |
| Glucocorticoids |
| Transfusions |
| Erythrocyte and platelet transfusions |
| Erythropoietic stimulating agents |
| Antiangiogenic agents |
| Thalidomide and lenalidomide |
| Patient-related |
| Older age |
| >65 years |
| Obesity |
| >35 BMI |
| African-American |
| Female |
| Prior VTE history |
| Chronic venous insufficiency |
| Comorbidities/medical problems (infection, pulmonary or renal disease, arterial thromboembolism, others) |
| Pregnancy |
| Tobacco |
| Poor performance status |
| Low level of activity/physical exercise |
| Major trauma and immobilization |
| Inherited thrombophilia (Factor V Leiden) |
BMI body mass index
Clinical trials assessing prophylaxis of VTE in hospitalized medical patients
| Clinical trial | Number of patients | Cancer patients (%) | Study drugs | VTE events | Relative risk reduction | Major bleeding | NTT | Cancer subgroup VTE events |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ARTEMIS | 849 | 15.4 | Fondaparinux sc (2.5 mg/24 h) vs. placebo | 5.6 vs. 10.5 % | 0.47 | 0.2 vs. 0.2 % | 20 | 17.0 vs. 3.9 % RR 4.3 NNH 8 |
| MEDENOX | 866 | 12.4 | Enoxaparin sc (40 mg/24 h) vs. placebo | 5.5 vs. 14.9 % | 0.37 | 1.7 vs. 1.1 % | 11 | 9.7 vs. 19.5 % RR 0.50 (95 % CI 0.14–1.72) NNT 10 |
| PREVENT | 3,706 | 5.1 | Dalteparin sc (5,000 UI/24 h) vs. placebo | 2.8 vs. 5.0 % | 0.55 | 0.5 vs. 0.2 % | 45 | 3.1 vs. 8.3 % RR 0.37 NNT 18 |
sc subcutaneously, VTE venous thromboembolism, NS not significant, NTT number of patients needed to treat to avoid one event, NNH number needed to harm, RR relative risk, CI confidence interval
Prophylaxis of VTE in ambulatory cancer patients during chemotherapy: recent clinical trials and meta-analysis
| Study | Number of patients | Type of tumor | Risk of thrombosis | LMWH | Dose |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| PROTECHT Lancet Onc’09 | 1,150 | Lung, pancreas, stomach, colorectal, breast, ovarian, head and neck cancer | High (pancreas, stomach) Low (breast, head and neck) | Nadroparin | 3,800 UI/24 h |
| FRAGEM UK EJC’11 | 123 | Pancreas | High | Dalteparin | 200 UI/kg/24 h × 4 weeks followed 150 UI/kg/24 h × 8 weeks |
| CONKO 004 ASCO’10 | 312 | Pancreas | High | Enoxaparin | 1 mg/kg/24 h × 3 m, followed 40 mg/24 h × 3 m |
| SAVE ONCO NEJM’12 | 3,212 | Lung, colorectal, stomach, pancreas, kidney and ovarian cancer | Moderate–high | Semuloparin | 20 mg/24 h |
| Meta-analysis Cochrane 2012 | 3,538 | Multiple neoplasms | Not defined | – | – |
| Akl pooled analysis NEJM’12 | ≈6.000 | Multiple neoplasms | Not defined | – | – |
m months, mg milligram, CT chemotherapy, NNT number of patients needed to treat to avoid one event, sVTE symptomatic venous thromboembolism, NS not significant, HR hazard ratio
* Venous thromboembolism incidence plus arterial thormboembolism incidence
Khorana’s risk assessment model (RAM)
| Patient characteristics | Risk score points | |
|---|---|---|
| Site of cancer | ||
| Very high risk (stomach, pancreas) | 2 | |
| High risk (lung, lymphoma, gynecologic, genitourinary excluding prostate) | 1 | |
| Pre-chemotherapy platelet count ≥350,000/mm3 | 1 | |
| Hemoglobin level less than <10 g/dl or use of red cell growth factors | 1 | |
| Pre-chemotherapy leukocyte count >11,000/mm3 | 1 | |
| BMI 35 ≥ 35 kg/m2 | 1 | |
BMI body mass index, sVTE symptomatic VTE
Randomized trials comparing LMWH with AVK for cancer-related VTE secondary prophylaxis
| Clinical trial/year | Study drug |
| Observation period | Recurrent VTE (VKA vs. LMWH) | Major bleeding (VKA vs. LMWH) | Mortality (VKA vs. LMWH) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| CLOT 2003 | Dalteparin 25 % LMWH dose reduction after 1 month | 672 | 6 months | 17 vs. 9 %; | 4 vs. 6 %; | 41 vs. 39 %; |
| CANTHANOX 2002 | Enoxaparin full dose once daily | 146 | 3 months | 21.1 vs. 10.5 %; | 16 vs. 7 %; | 22.7 vs. 11.3 %; |
| ONCENOX 2006 | Enoxaparin 2 full-dose schemes (twice and once daily)a | 122 | 6 months | 10 vs. 6.9 vs. 6.3. %; | 2.9 vs. 6.5 vs. 11.1 %; | 32.4 vs. 22.6 vs. 41.7 %; |
| LITE 2006 | Tinzaparin full dose | 200 | 3 months | 16 vs, 7 %; | 7 vs. 7 %; | 19 vs. 20 %; |
aAVK vs. enoxaparin 1 mg/KG/12 h and AVK vs. enoxaparin 1.5 mg/kg/day
Risk assessment model for cancer-associated recurrent VTE: the Ottawa score
| Risk factor | Points |
|---|---|
| Female sex | +1 |
| Lung cancer | +1 |
| Breast cancer | −1 |
| TNM stage I | −2 |
| Prior VTE | +1 |
−3 to 0 points: low VTE recurrence probability (≤4.5 % VTE recurrent risk)
1 to 3 points: high VTE recurrence probability (>19 % VTE recurrent risk)
Fig. 1Management of recurrent cancer-associated thrombosis (CAT)