| Literature DB >> 26780740 |
Alok A Khorana1, Marc Carrier2, David A Garcia3, Agnes Y Y Lee4.
Abstract
Venous thromboembolism (VTE) is a highly prevalent complication of malignancy with emerging changes in incidence, diagnosis and treatment paradigms. This manuscript, initiated by the Anticoagulation Forum, provides clinical guidance based on existing guidelines and consensus expert opinion where guidelines are lacking. We address a) the appropriate workup to search for occult malignancy in patients with idiopathic VTE, b) identification of high-risk cancer patients for primary thromboprophylaxis, c) the appropriate immediate and long-term treatment for people with cancer diagnosed with acute thromboembolism, d) the appropriate duration of anticoagulation and e) the appropriate treatment strategy in patients with recurrent VTE on anticoagulation. Areas of controversy and future directions in this field are highlighted.Entities:
Keywords: Cancer; Direct oral anticoagulants (DOAC); New oral anticoagulants (NOAC); Prevention; Risk factors; Venous thromboembolism
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26780740 PMCID: PMC4715852 DOI: 10.1007/s11239-015-1313-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Thromb Thrombolysis ISSN: 0929-5305 Impact factor: 2.300
Guidance questions to be considered
| 1. What is the appropriate workup to search for occult malignancy in patients with idiopathic VTE? |
| 2. How can high-risk cancer patients be identified for primary thromboprophylaxis? |
| 3. What is the appropriate immediate and long-term treatment for people with cancer diagnosed with acute thromboembolism, including the role of DOACs? |
| 4. What is the appropriate duration of anticoagulation? |
| 5. What is the appropriate treatment strategy in patients with recurrent VTE on anticoagulation? |
Predictive model for VTE according to Khorana et al. [25]
| Patient characteristics | Risk score |
|---|---|
| Site of cancer | |
| Very high risk (stomach, pancreas) | 2 |
| High risk (lung, lymphoma, gynecologic, bladder, testicular) | 1 |
| Prechemotherapy platelet count ≥350,000/mm3 | 1 |
| Hemoglobin level less than 10 g/dl or use of red cell growth factors | 1 |
| Prechemotherapy leukocyte count >11,000/mm3 | 1 |
| Body mass index ≥35 kg/m2 or more | 1 |
High-risk score ≥3
Intermediate risk score 1–2
Low-risk score 0
Dosing regimens for prevention and treatment of VTE in patients with malignancy (Adapted from ASCO [7])
| Drug | Regimen |
|---|---|
| Pharmacologic (anticoagulant) prophylaxisa | |
| Hospitalized medical patientsb | |
| Unfractionated heparin | 5000 U once every 8 hc |
| Dalteparin | 5000 U once daily |
| Enoxaparin | 40 mg once daily |
| Fondaparinux | 2.5 mg once daily |
| Surgical patientsb,d | |
| Unfractionated heparin | 5000 U 2–4 h preoperatively and once every 8 hours thereafter or 5000 U 10–12 h preoperatively and 5000 U once daily thereafterc |
| Dalteparin | 2500 U 2–4 h preoperatively and 5000 U once daily thereafter or 5000 U 10–12 h preoperatively and 5000 U once daily thereafter |
| Enoxaparin | 20 mg 2–4 h preoperatively and 40 mg once daily thereafter or 40 mg 10–12 h preoperatively and 40 mg once daily thereafter |
| Fondaparinux | 2.5 mg qd beginning 6–8 h postoperatively |
| Treatment of established VTE | |
| Initial | |
| Unfractionated heparine | 80 U/kg IV bolus, then 18 U/kg per hour IV; adjust dose based on aPTTh |
| Dalteparine,g,h | 100 U/kg once every 12 h; 200 U/kg once daily |
| Enoxoparine,g,h,i | 1 mg/kg once every 12 h; 1.5 mg/kg once daily |
| Tinzaparine,g,h,j | 175 U/kg once per day |
| Fondaparinuxe,g | <50 kg, 5.0 mg once daily; 50–100 kg, 7.5 mg once daily; >100 kg, 10 mg once daily |
| Long termk | |
| Dalteparinh,g | 200 U/kg once daily for 1 month, then 150 U/kg once daily |
| Enoxaparing,h,i | 1.5 mg/kg once daily; 1 mg/kg once every 12 h |
| Tinzaparinh,j | 175 U/kg once daily |
| Warfarin | Adjust dose to maintain INR 2–3 |
aPTT activated partial thromboplastin time, FDA US Food and Drug Administration, INR international normalized ratio, IV intravenous, LMWH low-molecular weight heparin, VTE venous thromboembolism
aAll doses are administered as subcutaneous injections except as indicated
bDuration for medical patients is length of hospital stay or until fully ambulatory; for surgical patients, prophylaxis should be continued for at least 7–10 days. Extended prophylaxis for up to 4 weeks should be considered for high-risk patients
cUnfractionated heparin 5000 U every 12 h has also been used but appears to be less effective
dWhen neuraxial anesthesia or analgesia is planned, prophylactic doses of once-daily LMWH should not be administered within 10–12 h before the procedure/instrumentation (including epidural catheter removal). After surgery, the first dose of LMWH can be administered 6–8 h postoperatively. After catheter removal the first dose of LMWH can be administered no earlier than 2 h afterward. Clinicians should refer to their institutional guidelines and the American Society of Regional Anesthesia Guidelines for more information
eParenteral anticoagulants should overlap with warfarin for 5–7 days minimum and continued until INR is in the therapeutic range for 2 consecutive days
fUnfractionated heparin infusion rate should be adjusted to maintain the aPTT within the therapeutic range in accordance with local protocol to correspond with a heparin level of 0.3–0.7 U/mL using a chromogenic Xa essay
gDependent on significant renal clearance; avoid in patients with creatinine clearance ≤30 mL/min or adjust dose based on anti-factor Xa levels
hOptimal dose unclear in patients >120 kg
iTwice-daily dosing may be more efficacious than once-daily dosing for enoxaparin based on post hoc data
jThis drug is not available in the United States
kTotal duration of therapy depends on clinical circumstances. See Clinical Question 4, section entitled “Initial Long-Term Treatment Up to 6 Months,” for more detailed discussion
Fig. 1Forest plot of relative risks across clinical trials comparing (a) DOAC versus VKA and (b) LMWH alone versus VKA for recurrent cancer-associated VTE. The definition of active cancer and therefore of the study population varied across trials
Summary of guidance statements
| Question | Guidance statement |
|---|---|
| 1. What is the appropriate workup to search for occult malignancy in patients with idiopathic VTE? | Patients with unprovoked VTE should undergo a through medical history and physical examination, basic laboratory investigations (complete blood counts, metabolic profile and liver function tests) and chest |
| 2. How can high-risk cancer patients be identified for primary thromboprophylaxis? | Recommendations are made assuming no existing contraindications to pharmacologic prophylaxis |
| 3. What is the appropriate immediate and long-term treatment for people with cancer diagnosed with acute thromboembolism, including the role of DOACs? | We suggest that patients with active cancer (i.e. known disease or receiving some form of anti-cancer therapy) and VTE be treated with LMWH for at least 6 months |
| 4. What is the appropriate duration of anticoagulation? | Anticoagulation with LMWH monotherapy should be prescribed for a minimum period of 6 months after diagnosis of cancer-associated VTE. Anticoagulation therapy should be continued beyond 6 months if a patient has active malignancy (i.e. persistent malignant disease) or if ongoing anti-cancer therapy is planned |
| 5. What is the appropriate treatment strategy in patients with recurrent VTE on anticoagulation? | We suggest that cancer patients with symptomatic recurrent VTE despite therapeutic anticoagulation with an agent other than LMWH be transitioned to therapeutic LMWH, assuming no contraindications to LMWH |