| Literature DB >> 26780744 |
Scott M Stevens1,2, Scott C Woller3,4, Kenneth A Bauer5, Raj Kasthuri6, Mary Cushman7, Michael Streiff8, Wendy Lim9, James D Douketis9.
Abstract
Thrombophilias are hereditary and/or acquired conditions that predispose patients to thrombosis. Testing for thrombophilia is commonly performed in patients with venous thrombosis and their relatives; however such testing usually does not provide information that impacts management and may result in harm. This manuscript, initiated by the Anticoagulation Forum, provides clinical guidance for thrombophilia testing in five clinical situations: following 1) provoked venous thromboembolism, 2) unprovoked venous thromboembolism; 3) in relatives of patients with thrombosis, 4) in female relatives of patients with thrombosis considering estrogen use; and 5) in female relatives of patients with thrombosis who are considering pregnancy. Additionally, guidance is provided regarding the timing of thrombophilia testing. The role of thrombophilia testing in arterial thrombosis and for evaluation of recurrent pregnancy loss is not addressed. Statements are based on existing guidelines and consensus expert opinion where guidelines are lacking. We recommend that thrombophilia testing not be performed in most situations. When performed, it should be used in a highly selective manner, and only in circumstances where the information obtained will influence a decision important to the patient, and outweigh the potential risks of testing. Testing should not be performed during acute thrombosis or during the initial (3-month) period of anticoagulation.Entities:
Keywords: Antiphospholipid syndrome; Hereditary thrombophilia; Risk factors; Thrombophilia; Venous thromboembolism
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26780744 PMCID: PMC4715840 DOI: 10.1007/s11239-015-1316-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Thromb Thrombolysis ISSN: 0929-5305 Impact factor: 2.300
Guidance questions to be considered
| Secondary prevention following provoked VTE |
| Should thrombophilia testing be performed to help determine duration of anticoagulation following provoked VTE? |
| Secondary prevention following unprovoked VTE |
| Should thrombophilia testing be performed to help determine duration of anticoagulation following unprovoked VTE? |
| Primary prevention in relatives of VTE patients |
| Should family members of patients with VTE or hereditary thrombophilia undergo thrombophilia testing? |
| Primary prevention in female relatives of VTE patients considering estrogen |
| Should female relatives of patients with VTE or hereditary thrombophilia who are considering using estrogen-containing medications be tested for thrombophilia? |
| Primary prevention in female relatives of VTE patients who are contemplating pregnancy |
| Should female relatives of patients with VTE or hereditary thrombophilia who are contemplating pregnancy be tested for thrombophilia? |
| Timing of thrombophilia assessment |
| When thrombophilia testing is performed, at what point in the patient’s care should this be done? |
Prevalence and thrombosis risk for selected thrombophilias
| Thrombophilia | Prevalence | Relative ( | Relative risk of recurrent VTE | Relative ( | Relative ( | Relative ( |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| FVL | 2–7 % | 3.48–5.51 | 1.1–1.8 | 2.47–15.04 | 1.4–13.16 (1.6–5.97 %) | 8.3 |
| FVL | 0.06–0.25 % | 6.79–19.29 | 1.8 | Uncertain | Uncertain | 34.4 |
| PGM | 1–2 % | 2.25–3.48 | 0.7–2.3 | 3.60–8.63 | (2.85 %) | 6.8 |
| PGM | Rare | 2.19–20.72 | Uncertain | Uncertain | Uncertain | 26 |
| Compound | 0.1 % | 1.13–5.04 | 2.7 | 3.79–76.47 | Uncertain | (4 %) |
| PC deficiency | 0.2–0.5 % | 10 | 1.8 | 1.7–23.9 | (2.96 %) | 4.8 |
| PS deficiency | 0.1–0.7 % | 9.6 | 1.0 | 1.4–17.1 | (2.3 %) | 3.2 |
| AT deficiency | 0.02 % | 10–30 | 2.6 | 1.4–115.8 | (5.73 %) | 4.7 |
| APS | 2 % | 7 | 1.5–6.8 | 0.3–3.1 | (1.05–2.63 %) | 15.8 |
OCP oral contraceptive pill (containing estrogen), HRT hormone replacement therapy (containing estrogen), VTE venous thromboembolism, FVL factor V Leiden, PGM prothrombin Gene G20210A, PC protein C, PS protein S, AT antithrombin, APS antiphospholipid syndrome
aData for are taken from several sources; absolute differences may therefore differ from calculations based on prevalence and relative risk [16, 17, 23, 32, 38, 50, 56, 62, 75–79]
bRelative risks are compared to non-users without thrombophilia
cWith the exception of heterozygous FVL, estimates are based on modeling rather than epidemiologic studies
Summary of guidance statements
| Question | Guidance statement |
|---|---|
| Secondary prevention following provoked VTE | |
| Should thrombophilia testing be performed to help determine duration of anticoagulation following provoked VTE? | Do not perform thrombophilia testing following an episode of provoked VTE. |
| Secondary prevention following unprovoked VTE | |
| Should thrombophilia testing be performed to help determine duration of anticoagulation following unprovoked VTE? | Do not perform thrombophilia testing in patients following an episode of unprovoked VTE. |
| Primary prevention in relatives of VTE patients | |
| Should family members of patients with VTE or hereditary thrombophilia undergo thrombophilia testing? | Do not test for thrombophilia in asymptomatic family members of patients with VTE or hereditary thrombophilia. |
| Primary prevention in female relatives of VTE patients considering estrogen | |
| Should female relatives of patients with VTE or hereditary thrombophilia who are considering using estrogen-containing medications be tested for thrombophilia? | Do not test for thrombophilia in asymptomatic family members of patients with VTE or hereditary thrombophilia who are contemplating use of estrogen. |
| Primary prevention in female relatives of VTE patients who are contemplating pregnancy | |
| Should female relatives of patients with VTE or hereditary thrombophilia who are contemplating pregnancy be tested for thrombophilia? | Do not test for thrombophilia in asymptomatic family members of patients with VTE or hereditary thrombophilia who are contemplating pregnancy. |
| Timing of thrombophilia assessment | |
| When thrombophilia testing is performed, at what point in the patient’s care should this be done? | Do not perform thrombophilia testing at the time of VTE diagnosis or during the initial 3-month course of anticoagulant therapy. |