Cheri K Walker1,2, Elizabeth A Sandmann1, Taylor J Horyna1, Mark A Gales1,3,4. 1. 1 Southwestern Oklahoma State University College of Pharmacy, Weatherford, OK, USA. 2. 2 Integris Southwest Medical Center, Oklahoma City, OK, USA. 3. 3 Integris Baptist Medical Center, Oklahoma City, OK, USA. 4. 4 Great Plains Family Medicine Residency Program, Oklahoma City, OK, USA.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To review the evidence regarding increased enoxaparin dosing for venous thromboembolism (VTE) prophylaxis in the general trauma patient population. DATA SOURCES: A search of MEDLINE databases (1946 to October 2016) was conducted using the search terms enoxaparin, thromboembolism prophylaxis, venous thromboembolism, trauma, anti-factor Xa, and weight-based dosing. Additional references were identified from a review of literature citations. STUDY SELECTION AND DATA EXTRACTION: Search results were limited to English-language studies conducted in humans. Trials that included only obese patients or nontrauma patients were excluded. DATA SYNTHESIS: A total of 7 trials (958 patients) explored the use of increased dosing of enoxaparin for VTE prophylaxis in trauma patients. Patients were divided by enoxaparin dosing strategies: standard dosing of 30 mg twice daily (BID; n = 509), higher initial dosing regimen (n = 216), or dosing based on anti-FXa level adjustments (n = 233). The majority of the 42 total VTE events (64.3%) occurred in the standard dosing regimen. Within each group, VTE was reported in 5.3% of patients in the standard dosing group, 3.2% in the higher initial dosing group, and 4% in the anti-FXa adjustment group. Initial subtherapeutic anti-FXa levels occurred in 33% to 92% of standard dose patients and 9% to 39% of higher initial dose patients. The average weight-based dose required to achieve a therapeutic level ranged between 0.43 and 0.54 mg/kg/dose BID. The overall rate of bleeding was low, with 3 incidents (0.37%) reported. CONCLUSION: Standard-dose enoxaparin prophylaxis may not be optimal for the general trauma patient population. Weight-based enoxaparin dosing (0.5 mg/kg/dose BID) is an option in trauma patients considered to be at a lower risk of bleeding complications.
OBJECTIVE: To review the evidence regarding increased enoxaparin dosing for venous thromboembolism (VTE) prophylaxis in the general traumapatient population. DATA SOURCES: A search of MEDLINE databases (1946 to October 2016) was conducted using the search terms enoxaparin, thromboembolism prophylaxis, venous thromboembolism, trauma, anti-factor Xa, and weight-based dosing. Additional references were identified from a review of literature citations. STUDY SELECTION AND DATA EXTRACTION: Search results were limited to English-language studies conducted in humans. Trials that included only obesepatients or nontrauma patients were excluded. DATA SYNTHESIS: A total of 7 trials (958 patients) explored the use of increased dosing of enoxaparin for VTE prophylaxis in traumapatients. Patients were divided by enoxaparin dosing strategies: standard dosing of 30 mg twice daily (BID; n = 509), higher initial dosing regimen (n = 216), or dosing based on anti-FXa level adjustments (n = 233). The majority of the 42 total VTE events (64.3%) occurred in the standard dosing regimen. Within each group, VTE was reported in 5.3% of patients in the standard dosing group, 3.2% in the higher initial dosing group, and 4% in the anti-FXa adjustment group. Initial subtherapeutic anti-FXa levels occurred in 33% to 92% of standard dose patients and 9% to 39% of higher initial dose patients. The average weight-based dose required to achieve a therapeutic level ranged between 0.43 and 0.54 mg/kg/dose BID. The overall rate of bleeding was low, with 3 incidents (0.37%) reported. CONCLUSION: Standard-dose enoxaparin prophylaxis may not be optimal for the general traumapatient population. Weight-based enoxaparin dosing (0.5 mg/kg/dose BID) is an option in traumapatients considered to be at a lower risk of bleeding complications.
Authors: Geoffrey D Barnes; Allison Burnett; Arthur Allen; Marilyn Blumenstein; Nathan P Clark; Adam Cuker; William E Dager; Steven B Deitelzweig; Stacy Ellsworth; David Garcia; Scott Kaatz; Tracy Minichiello Journal: J Thromb Thrombolysis Date: 2020-07 Impact factor: 2.300
Authors: Eric J Ley; Carlos V R Brown; Ernest E Moore; Jack A Sava; Kimberly Peck; David J Ciesla; Jason L Sperry; Anne G Rizzo; Nelson G Rosen; Karen J Brasel; Rosemary Kozar; Kenji Inaba; Matthew J Martin Journal: J Trauma Acute Care Surg Date: 2020-11 Impact factor: 3.313
Authors: Laura Gillespie; Rashid Z Khan; John E Stillson; Connor M Bunch; Faisal Salim Shariff; Jacob Speybroeck; Anne Grisoli; Meredith Wierman Schmidt; Htay Phyu; Jason Jablonski; Byars Wells; Daniel H Fulkerson; Lyndsay Oancea; Abraham Leiser; Mark Walsh Journal: J Pharm Health Care Sci Date: 2021-04-01
Authors: Joseph F Rappold; Forest R Sheppard; Samuel P Carmichael Ii; Joseph Cuschieri; Eric Ley; Erika Rangel; Anupamaa J Seshadri; Christopher P Michetti Journal: Trauma Surg Acute Care Open Date: 2021-02-24
Authors: Ali Scrimenti; Robert W Seabury; Christopher D Miller; Lucy Ruangvoravat; William Darko; Luke A Probst; Gregory M Cwikla Journal: Pharm Pract (Granada) Date: 2019-10-31
Authors: Adam Cuker; Eric K Tseng; Robby Nieuwlaat; Pantep Angchaisuksiri; Clifton Blair; Kathryn Dane; Jennifer Davila; Maria T DeSancho; David Diuguid; Daniel O Griffin; Susan R Kahn; Frederikus A Klok; Alfred Ian Lee; Ignacio Neumann; Ashok Pai; Menaka Pai; Marc Righini; Kristen M Sanfilippo; Deborah Siegal; Mike Skara; Kamshad Touri; Elie A Akl; Imad Bou Akl; Mary Boulos; Romina Brignardello-Petersen; Rana Charide; Matthew Chan; Karin Dearness; Andrea J Darzi; Philipp Kolb; Luis E Colunga-Lozano; Razan Mansour; Gian Paolo Morgano; Rami Z Morsi; Atefeh Noori; Thomas Piggott; Yuan Qiu; Yetiani Roldan; Finn Schünemann; Adrienne Stevens; Karla Solo; Matthew Ventresca; Wojtek Wiercioch; Reem A Mustafa; Holger J Schünemann Journal: Blood Adv Date: 2021-02-09
Authors: Navpreet K Dhillon; Yassar M Hashim; Naomi Berezin; Felix Yong; Geena Conde; Russell Mason; Eric J Ley Journal: Trauma Surg Acute Care Open Date: 2021-05-10