Literature DB >> 34335052

Cancer-Associated Thrombosis: A Clinical Scoping Review of the Risk Assessment Models Across Solid Tumours and Haematological Malignancies.

Manar Mosaad1, Mohamed Hassan Elnaem2, Ejaz Cheema3, Ismail Ibrahim1, Jamalludin Ab Rahman4, Ahlam Naila Kori5, How Soon Hin1.   

Abstract

Cancer-associated thrombosis (CAT) is a leading cause of death in cancer patients receiving outpatient chemotherapy. The latest guidelines emphasize stratifying the patients in terms of CAT risks periodically. Multiple risk assessment models (RAMs) were developed to classify patients and guide thromboprophylaxis to high-risk patients. This study aimed to discuss and highlight different RAMs across various malignancy types with their related advantages and disadvantages. A scoping review was conducted using predefined search terms in three scientific databases, including Google Scholar, Science Direct, and PubMed. The search for studies was restricted to original research articles that reported risk assessment models published in the last thirteen years (between 2008 and 2021) to cover the most recently published evidence following the development of the principal risk assessment score in 2008. Data charting of the relevant trials, scores, advantages, and disadvantages were done iteratively considering the malignancy type. Of the initially identified 1115 studies, 39 studies with over 67,680 patients were included in the review. In solid organ malignancy, nine risk assessment scores were generated. The first and most known Khorana risk score still offers the best available risk assessment model when used for high-risk populations with a threshold of 2 and above. However, KRS has a limitation of failure to stratify low-risk patients. The COMPASS-CAT score showed the best performance in the lung carcinoma patients who have a higher prevalence of thrombosis than other malignancy subtypes. In testicular germ cell tumours, Bezan et al RAM is a validated good discriminatory RAM for this malignancy subtype. CAT in haematological malignancy seems to be under-investigated and has multiple disease-related, and treatment-related confounding factors. AL-Ani et al score performed efficiently in acute leukemia. In multiple myeloma, both SAVED and IMPEDED VTE scores showed good performance. Despite the availability of different disease-specific scores in lymphoma-related thrombosis, the standard of care needs to be redefined.
© 2021 Mosaad et al.

Entities:  

Keywords:  cancer; prophylaxis; risk assessment; thrombosis

Year:  2021        PMID: 34335052      PMCID: PMC8318782          DOI: 10.2147/IJGM.S320492

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Int J Gen Med        ISSN: 1178-7074


Introduction

The link between cancer and its predisposing risk of thrombosis has been well identified.1 Compared to the general population, cancer patients have a 7-times higher risk of thromboembolism.2 Cancer-associated thrombosis (CAT) is the second most prevalent mortality cause in malignancy patients, following the mortality caused by the direct impact of cancer.3 Mortality risk increases fourfold with advanced malignancy. Furthermore, CAT is a significant cause of morbidity for patients, resulting in a lower quality of life and more frequent hospitalization.4 There is a 5–10% probability of developing CAT among patients on chemotherapy within the first year following the disease diagnosis.5 The yearly incidence of CAT varies widely from 1.4% to 10% and up to 20% in specific cases attributed to a wide range of presentation variations such as the cancer type, stage, patient characteristics, and treatment protocols.6 Since thromboprophylaxis may reduce CAT rates by up to 50% in high-risk patients, extensive research has been done to establish accurate and discriminative risk assessment models (RAM) that can distinguish high-risk CAT patients in whom thromboprophylaxis is most likely to confer significant benefits and overweight any possible risks.7 Given the high CAT-related morbidity and mortality, thromboprophylaxis is recommended for moderate to high VTE risk ambulatory patients undergoing chemotherapy based on the type of malignancy or by using a valid risk evaluation model.8,9 The first risk assessment score was introduced in 2008 by Alok Khorana et al through the most known and validated model for risk evaluation, The Khorana Risk Score (KRS).10 A systematic review evaluated the performance of the KRS from 2008 till 2018 and included 55 cohorts (N= 34,555) showed consistency in identifying ambulatory patients who are at high risk of developing VTE; however, patients with low scores (0 or 1) were still experiencing a significant rate of VTE incidence.11 In the recent AVERT and CASSINI studies measuring the performance of thromboprophylaxis use of direct oral anticoagulant (DOAC) in ambulatory cancer patients, the used KRS ≥2 showed a substantial decline in the overall VTE burden.12,13 It was revealed that the KRS has numerous limitations, particularly in the low-risk group; thus, several risk assessment scores were also developed. Although the majority of the scores are pan-malignant RAM, other diseases specific RAM also developed. This raises concern about whether the availability of a more specific RAM would yield an even better risk reduction. Up to the best of the authors’ knowledge, there is a lack of evidence to discuss and highlight different RAMs across various malignancy types with their related advantages and disadvantages. This review aimed to discuss and summarize available risk assessment models/scores in various malignancies and identify their relative performance and advantages.

Methods

The framework for performing scoping reviews was the main methodological base for performing this scoping review. We followed the stepwise illustrated approach as proposed by H. Arksey & L. O’Malley and advanced further by Levac et al.14,15

Identifying the Research Questions

This review focussed on studying the risk assessment models of cancer-associated thrombosis. The following research questions guided the process of including studies, extracting and summarising assessment models, and their main characteristics, advantages, and disadvantages: What are available risk assessment models for cancer-associated thrombosis in ambulatory cancer patients undergoing chemotherapy? Which score has the most comparative discriminative performance among risk assessment models in each malignancy type among ambulatory cancer patients?

Identifying Relevant Studies

We included original research articles published between January 2008 and January 2021 that reported risk assessment models in cancer-associated thrombosis (Table 1). The search for studies was restricted to the last thirteen years to review the most recently published evidence following the development of the principal risk assessment score in 2008. (Table 2). A comprehensive search in three databases, Google Scholar, PubMed, and ScienceDirect, was performed to retrieve relevant studies using predefined terms. The search terms included (“cancer-associated thrombosis“), (“CAT“), (“risk assessment model“), (“risk assessment score“), (”RAM”), (”risk stratification”), (”prediction tool”), and (”predictive score”). Figure 1 shows the flow chart of the process of inclusion of the studies.
Table 1

Inclusion Criteria

CategoryInclusion Criteria
Language of publicationEnglish
Year of publicationJAN 2008–JAN 2021
Publication typeOriginal research articles
Outcomes measuresRisk assessment model discriminative performance
MethodologyStudies of derivation, validation, or comparison of risk assessment models were eligible for inclusion
PatientsAmbulatory active cancer patients.Currently receiving chemotherapy or planned for chemotherapy
Table 2

RAM in Solid Organ Malignancy Components and Scores

Patients CharacteristicsKRSONKOTEV ScorePROTECHT ScoreCONKO ScoreVienna-CATS ScoreTicOnco ScoreNew-CATS ScoreCOMPASS -CAT ScoreThe MDACC CAT
Pancreatic or gastric cancer (very high-risk tutors)2KRS ≥2= 12222Tumour siteCancer type +
Lung, gynaecological, lymphoma, bladder, or testicular (high-risk tutors)11111
Prechemotherapy haemoglobin <110 g/L or use of erythropoietin11111
Prechemotherapy leucocyte count >11×109/L11111
Prechemotherapy platelet count >350 G/L111112
Body mass index ≥35 kg/m211-11
Previous venous thromboembolism11
Metastatic disease/advance12+
Vascular/lymphatic macroscopic compression (detected by MRI)1
World Health Organization performance status >21
D-dimer>1.44 μg/L1+
Soluble P-selectin>53.1 ng/L1
Single nucleotide polymorphism1
Gemcitabine chemotherapy1
Platinum-based chemotherapy1+
Use of erythrocyte stimulating agent (ESA)+
Time since cancer diagnosis<6 months4
Central venous catheter3
Anti-hormonal therapy for women with hormone receptor + breast cancer or on anthracycline.6
Cardiovascular risk factors/comorbidities (≥2 of the following: personal history of peripheral arterial disease, ischemic stroke, coronary artery disease, hypertension, hyperlipidaemia, diabetes melitis, obesity).5
Hospitalization5
High risk ≥3, Intermediate risk 1–2, Low risk 0Nomogram scaling≤6:low/Intermediate,>7: high riskNomogram scaling
Figure 1

Flowchart for selecting the studies included in the scoping review.

Inclusion Criteria RAM in Solid Organ Malignancy Components and Scores Flowchart for selecting the studies included in the scoping review.

Study Selection

Two independent reviewers performed the initial identification of studies for potential inclusion at this stage according to the predefined inclusion criteria presented in Table 1. As suggested by the followed methodological approach, meetings were conducted regularly to select the studies. Further involvement of an independent reviewer was considered to resolve any conflicts or discrepancies in the included studies. Finally, full-text articles published in the last thirteen years that met the inclusion criteria were considered for inclusion (Table 1).

Charting the Data

An iterative pattern of charting the data was adopted using a form specifically to extract relevant information consistent with the above-mentioned research questions. The included variables were study author, year, main score components, advantages, disadvantages, conducted validation trials, and the key findings. Independent data extraction for the first five studies was performed and evaluated. A consistent data extraction pattern was then completed for the remaining included studies concerning the designed extraction form.

Compiling, Summarizing, and Reporting the Findings

A descriptive analysis of the retrieved data was conducted. Reporting the key findings was done in a reliable pattern to the proposed research questions and the main work objectives. Based on the malignancy subtypes, a summary of the advantages and disadvantages of the risk assessment models was discussed and tabulated. For cancer-associated thrombosis, the performance of the risk assessment models compared to others was highlighted.

Results and Discussion

Of the initially identified 1115 studies, 39 studies with over 67,680 patients were included in the review. Overall, the review identified three major malignancy subtypes with well-defined dedicated risk assessment models: solid organ, lung, and haematological malignancies. Few RAMs that have been validated for use across all malignancy types were discussed. Three main sections as per malignancy types are discussed in the following part.

Risk Assessment Model (RAM) in Solid Organ Tumour

The initial risk assessment model, KRS (2008), was pan-cancerous for all types of malignancies and not disease-specific. However, the validation studies showed suboptimal KRS performance in certain malignancies such as lung carcinoma and haematological malignancies that will be individually discussed later. The RAMs currently available for thrombosis risk stratification in solid organ malignancy are KRS being the first and most known score, Khorana modification scores (CATS Score, PROTECHT Score, CONKO Score, TiC-Onco risk score, and ONKOTEV Score), and the new generation models (The COMPASS-CAT score, new Vienna-CATS score, and The MDACC CAT model). These scores have similarities and unique features for each of them, as shown in Table 2. The majority of these RAMs have been derived through retrospective statistical analysis of ambulatory cancer patient cohorts subsequently validated. We reviewed all these trials with over 41,896 patients in derivation and validation studies. These RAMs vary widely; hence while some are feasible, some have limitations and disadvantages if considering the real-life setting, as discussed below. A list of the studies involved different RAMs and a summary of their key findings, advantages, and disadvantages are provided in Table 3.
Table 3

RAM in Solid Organ Malignancy; Populations, Statistics, Advantages, and Disadvantages

RAM (Year)PopulationType of MalignancyParametersC Statistics/ HRValidation CohortAdvantages/Disadvantages
Khorana risk score (2008)16Derivation cohort, n = 2701Validation cohort, n = 1365Breast, Lung, Ovarian, Sarcoma, Colon, and LymphomasSite of cancer platelet count ≥350 x 109/L haemoglobin ≤100 g/L (10 g/dL) and/or use of erythropoiesis-stimulating agents, leukocyte count ≥11 x 109/L, body mass index (BMI) of 35 kg/m2 or more0.7 for both cohortsMore than 55 validation cohorts and several systematic reviews.Advantages: Good in classifying high-risk.-more predictive when considering a score of ≥2 as a cut-off point for high riskDisadvantages: Suboptimal performance in predicting VTE in low-risk groups
Vienna Cancer and Thrombosis Study (CATS) Score(2018)17n = 819Breast, Lung, Stomach, Colorectal, Pancreas, Kidney, Prostate, Brain, Lymphoma, Multiple myelomaAdds soluble P-selectin and D-dimer to KRS1.9 per 1 point increaseComparison study with no statistical significance2*Disadvantages: Applicability in p soluble monitoring in a real-life setting might not be feasible
New Vienna (CATSCORE)18CATS cohort, n = 1423MICA cohort, n = 832Breast, Prostate, Lung, Colorectal, Esophagus, Kidney, Lymphoma, Bladder or urothelial, Uterine, Cervical, Ovarian, Pancreas, StomachSite of cancer and D-dimer0.66 in CATS0.68 in MICAComparison study with no statistical significance2*Advantages: only two factors scoreDisadvantage: Suboptimal performance in the comparison trial
PROTECHT Score (2012)Placebo arm, n = 381Nadroparin arm, n = 769Gastrointestinal, Lung, Breast, Ovary, Pancreas, Head and NeckAdd gemcitabine, cisplatin, or carboplatin therapy to KRSNA1 study with positive192 studies show poor performance2,20Advantages: easy to use, considers treatment-related risk factorsDisadvantages: Suboptimal performance in the comparison trial
CONKO004(2015)21n= 312NAReplace BMI in KRS with performance statusNATwo comparison study with negative outcome*19,20Advantage: easy applicabilityDisadvantages: poor stratification performance
ONKOTEV Score(2017)22n = 843Khorana score >2, personal history of VTE, metastatic disease, vascular/lymphatic macroscopic compressionC-statistic:0.719 at 3 months0.754 at 6 monthsHR: Score = 1: 3.29Score = 2: 6.54Score > 2: 13.74Multiple validation and comparison trials with negative outcome.*2,20Advantages: easy to apply, consider tumour-related factorsDisadvantages: Suboptimal performance
The COMPASS-CAT score(2016)23n = 1023Breast, Colorectal, Lung, or Ovarian cancerAnthracycline or anti-hormonal therapy, time since cancer diagnosis, central venous catheter, stage of cancer, presence of cardiovascular risk factors, recent hospitalization for acute medical illness, personal history of VTE, and platelet countC statistic: 0.850Multiple validation.24–27Advantages: Good performance in lung carcinoma,24 moves from traditional KRSDisadvantages: poor calibration.
Tic-ONCO score(2018)28n = 391Adds genetic risk score to KSC-statistic 0.73HR = 1.69NADisadvantages: Application of genetics in a real-life setting is questionable
The MDACC CAT model29n= 548Breast, Gastrointestinal non-pancreas, Pancreas, Genitourinary non-kidney Kidney, Gynaecological Lung and head/neck LymphomaPresence of metastasis, use of platinum-based chemotherapy, the use of ESAs and malignancies of origin in the gastrointestinal, gynecologic, and head-neck/lung organsC-index: 0.74NAAdvantages: readily available informationDisadvantages: lack of external validation

Notes: *Comparison studies was done between Khorana, PROTECHT, CONKO, CATScore and ONKOTEV.

Abbreviations: MICA, Multinational Cohort Study; CATS, Vienna Cancer and thrombosis study; HR, hazards ratio; C-statistic /C-index, concordance statistic; NA, not available.

RAM in Solid Organ Malignancy; Populations, Statistics, Advantages, and Disadvantages Notes: *Comparison studies was done between Khorana, PROTECHT, CONKO, CATScore and ONKOTEV. Abbreviations: MICA, Multinational Cohort Study; CATS, Vienna Cancer and thrombosis study; HR, hazards ratio; C-statistic /C-index, concordance statistic; NA, not available.

Khorana Risk Score (KRS)

KRS was developed in 2008 with a cohort of around 4000 ambulatory cancer patients. Two-thirds of the population was included in the derivation of the score, and then the remaining one-third was used to validate it. Median follow-up was 73 days only. The score was composed of the tumour site, patient body mass index, and pre-chemotherapy blood counts. Throughout the last decade, numerous amounts of validation trials were performed. Some were disease-specific such as Srikanthan et al for germ cell tumour,30 and Santai et al, who did pooled analysis for lymphoma.31 In 2019, Mulder et al enrolled 34,555 from 55 cohorts of ambulatory cancer patients assessing the six-month incidence of thrombosis and KRS performance in a systematic review and meta-analysis. The authors concluded that KRS could be used to select cancer patients at high VTE risk for thromboprophylaxis; however, most CAT events take place outside this high-risk group.11 It was also noted that reducing the threshold of KRS score to two points was able to stratify 55% of CAT patients as high risk compared to 23% for a threshold of ≥3 points. Overall, KRS was able to classify high-risk patients; however, predicting CAT in the low-risk groups is suboptimal. Notably, KRS performance in predicting VTE in specific subtypes of malignancies is less than others, such as lung carcinoma,32 urothelial malignancy,33 and hepatocellular carcinoma.34 Despite the limitation of KRS in a pooled analysis of the recent CASSINI and AVERT studies, comparing direct oral anticoagulant (DOAC) thromboprophylaxis to placebo, thromboprophylaxis with DOAC in patients with KRS ≥2 favours a 6-month VTE risk decrement of 0.56 (95% CI 0.35–0.89).5,35–37

Vienna Cancer and Thrombosis Study (CATS) Score

Ay, et al developed a VTE-risk evaluation tool in the Vienna-Cancer and Thrombosis study (Vienna-CATS). It integrated high D-dimer and P-selectin levels to Khorana score after validating their significant predictive value in an individual cohort. The six-month VTE risk was 17.7% in the high-risk group (≥3 points). This score’s positive predictive value PPV was higher than the Khorana score; however, clinical utilization is constrained by the need for particular biomarkers, such as P-selectin.17,38

New Vienna (Catscore)

The same research group of Vienna-CATS score published a new score with 1423 derivation cohort and 832 patients for the validation cohort. The score comprises only two items: D-dimer and tumour site levels before chemotherapy developing a nomogram to predict CAT. It reported better c-indexes over the Khorana score in derivation (0.66 vs 0.61) and validation (0.68 vs 0.56) cohorts. Nevertheless, the applicability of its use in a real-life setting has to be considered.18

PROTECHT Score

It has been suggested to add gemcitabine, cisplatin, or carboplatin therapy as additional risk factors to KRS by Verso et al in 2012, based on data analysis from the PROTECHT study. The Protecht score showed an enhanced capacity to identify patients at high risk for VTE compared to the Khorana score.39,40 The performance of the Protecht score was assessed in several RAM comparison trials. Van Es et al in 2017 reported that the score appears to distinguish better between low- and high-risk patients compared to KRS and CONKO scores. However, another two studies by Schorling et al and Di Nisio et al concluded that the score performed sub-optimally at the conventional 3-point threshold.2,19,20

CONKO004 Score

A modification of the Khorana score by substituting BMI with performance status was suggested by Pelzer et al in the CONKO004 study evaluating the use of LMWH prophylaxis in pancreatic cancer patients. This score has been included in two comparison studies with no positive outcome.19–21

ONKOTEV Score

A Khorana modification score considers adding vascular structures compression, the presence of metastatic disease, and the personal history of previous VTE. In a validation cohort (n= 843), the 12-months VTE probability was 33.9% among patients with a score ≥3 and 19.4% in patients with a score of 2. The AUC was reported superior for ONKOTEV than the Khorana score at six months (0.75 vs 0.59).22 This score has undergone further validations in a retrospective study with pancreatic cancer cohort only. It showed a cumulative prevalence of CAT was less than 10% for ONKOTEV scores 0 or 1 and approximately 40% and 70% for scores 2 and ≥3, respectively.41 Subsequently, another study by Di Nisio et al concluded that performance improves at a positivity threshold of two points instead of three. Two studies by Schorling et al and Van Es et al concluded the RAM failed to show statistical significance in predicting VTE.2,19,20 ONKOTEV score is easily applicable and have good predictability in a score of 2 and more and offers better stratification than KRS however shares the same limitation of failing to identify cases in the low-risk group.

The COMPASS-CAT Score

The COMPASS-CAT score was developed to improve CAT risk assessment for colon, lung, ovarian, and breast cancers. This score includes cancer-associated factors (time since diagnosis, stage), patient-related characteristics (cardiovascular risk factors, platelet count, history of VTE, recent hospitalization), and treatment-associated aspects (anthracycline or anti-hormonal therapy, central venous catheter). The risk of VTE was 1.7% in the low/intermediate-risk group, while in the high-risk population, it was 13.3%. The score had a good discriminatory capacity (AUC 0.85).23 Retrospective validation of 3814 patients concluded that model discrimination was moderate and calibration was poor; however, the model had a good negative predictive value.27 On the contrary, two validation studies involving lung carcinoma patients showed good outcomes, which will be discussed later in this work.

The MDACC CAT Model

University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center developed a new RAM Using multivariate model analyses. The presence of metastatic disease, platinum-based chemotherapy regime, ESAs use, and malignancies of origin in the gastrointestinal, gynecologic, and head-neck/lung organs were thrombosis determinants used to construct a nomogram for CAT prediction. The c-index of the model was 0.74 indicating good discrimination. There is no external validation of this nomogram yet.29

TiC-Onco Risk Score

TiC-Onco is unique from other RAMs as it included genetic risk factors after three steps development protocol. It is composed of Genetic risk, BMI >25, Family history, and Primary tumour site. The study showed a positive predictive value of up to 37%, which is only an incremental increase over the predictive values obtained after using the Khorana score that correctly predicted VTE in only 22% of the CAT patients. It was not validated yet, and the applicability in the real-life setting is guarded by the diagnostic capacity of a genetic lab in different hospitals.28

Risk Assessment Models in Lung Carcinoma

Lung carcinoma is a distinctive group of solid organ malignancy given the disease nature and the proximity to major vessels and treatment protocols. Lung cancer has been associated with a high incidence of VTE compared to other malignancy groups; this led to more research in this subgroup of patients.42,43 Table 4 shows several RAMs were studied explicitly for lung carcinoma with a total population of 4161 patients.
Table 4

Different RAM in Lung Carcinoma Components, Statistics, and Performances

RAMKRS16COMPASS-CAT23ROADMAP‐CAT Biomarker Score26COMPASS-CAT ROADMAP26CANTARISK Score54
ParametersSite of cancer platelet count ≥350 x 109/L haemoglobin ≤100 g/L (10 g/dL) and/or use of erythropoiesis stimulating agents, leukocyte count ≥11 x 109/L, body mass index of 35 kg/m2 or moreAnthracycline or anti-hormonal therapy, time since cancer diagnosis, central venous catheter, stage of cancer, presence of CV risk factors platelet count, recent hospitalization of acute medical illness, personal VTE historyThe procoagulant phospholipid‐dependent clotting time (Procoag‐PPL) and the mean rate index (MRI) of the propagation phase of thrombin generation assayProcoag‐ PPL and MRI with the COMPASS‐CAT RAMOlder age, current or former smokers, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, ECOG PS ≥2, no prior cancer surgery, and metastatic disease are predictive of VTE
TypePan cancerousBreast, Colorectal, Lung or Ovarian cancerLungLungLung
StatisticsUnable to stratify (1.1;95%-CI, 0.72–1.7)44C statistic 0.8924(NPV) 97%(PPV) 25%(NPV) 97%(PPV) 70%p<0.0001awaiting validation
PerformanceKRS underperformed in risk stratification in lung ca.Excellent performance in small cohort, need large cohort validationApplicability of special blood assays in real life setting need to be consideredApplicability of special blood assays in real life setting need to be consideredNeed a validation

Abbreviations: CI, concordance index; C- statistic, concordance statistic; NPV, negative predictive value; PPV, positive predictive value; ECOG PS, Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group Performance Status.

Different RAM in Lung Carcinoma Components, Statistics, and Performances Abbreviations: CI, concordance index; C- statistic, concordance statistic; NPV, negative predictive value; PPV, positive predictive value; ECOG PS, Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group Performance Status.

Khorana Risk Score

A meta-analysis evaluated 3293 patients, of which 1913 were lung cancer patients. In the analysis, the Khorana score was incapable of stratifying patients with lung cancer based on their VTE risk compared to other malignancy groups.44 A prospective study by Mansfield et al for non-small cell lung carcinoma confirmed the limitation of KRS in stratifying patients according to their VTE risk32 similar to a comparison study by Rupa‑Matysek et al.24

Compass-Cat

Despite the performance in the overall solid organ malignancy validation study, COMPASS-CAT score in lung carcinoma in specific has a superiority study in which Rupa‑Matysek et al; compared Khorana risk score (KRS), COMPASS-cancer associated thrombosis score (COMPASS-CAT), PROTECHT score and CONKO score. Moreover, it involved 118 patients with lung cancer. The COMPASS-CAT model was the most precise predictor of VTE incidence in patients with lung malignancy with a C statistic of 0.89. The score was able to detect 100% of patients with established VTE.

ROADMAP‐CAT Biomarker Score

The prospective ROADMAP-CAT study detected two biomarkers of hypercoagulability, the mean rate index (MRI) of the propagation phase of thrombin generation and the procoagulant phospholipid-dependent clotting time (Procoag‐PPL). These have been clinically significant for stratifying ambulatory cancer patients with lung adenocarcinoma who had received a maximum of one chemotherapy cycle into high and intermediate/low risk for VTE. This score’s positive predictive value (PPV) was 25%, and the negative predictive value (NPV) was 97%.26 In the same study, the research team studied the association of the Procoag‐ PPL and MRI with the COMPASS‐CAT RAM, which added to its accuracy with PPV of 70% and NPV of 97%. Although this result is promising, the Procoag-PPL and MRI testing feasibility in the real-life setting as a standard of care in all cancer patients is questionable.

CANTARISK Score

In a retrospective analysis of 1980 patients with lung cancer, the study concluded that current or former smokers, older age, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, ECOG PS ≥2, no prior cancer surgery, and metastatic disease are predictive of VTE in lung carcinoma patients; however, a validation study is required.

Testicular Germ Cell Tumour

Testicular germ cell tumours are among the most common malignancies affecting adolescents and young adults.45 In this group of malignancy, thrombosis events cover up to 8.4% and increase to 17% in patients ongoing cisplatin-based chemotherapy,45,46 hence some research was directed to thrombosis risk assessment. Aside from the pancancerous KRS, two risk assessment model was developed:

Srikanthan et al RPLN-VTE-Risk-Classifier

A single parameter risk identifier by Srikanthan et al in a cohort of 216 patients concluded that large retroperitoneal lymphadenopathy (RPLN) more than 5 cm with metastatic disease in patients receiving first-line cisplatin-based chemotherapy is associated with high thrombosis risk (AUROC 0.61 vs 0.57 for KRS).30

Bezan et al Risk Assessment Model

In derivation cohort 657 and validation cohort 349, Bezan et al. developed a disease-specific RAM. The findings underpinned higher tumour stage and a large RPLN as the significant predictors of VTE. The score has good risk discrimination in comparison to the previously mentioned RPLN-VTE risk classifier (AUC-ROC:0.75 vs.0.63).46

Risk Assessment Model in Hematological Malignancies

Patients with haematological malignancy tend to be underrepresented groups in thrombosis research since this population incline to have variable characteristics and blood parameters. Also, this group of patients remains vulnerable to thrombosis predisposed by potentially thrombogenic therapy. Several works aimed to construct risk assessment models (RAM) to guide patients’ risk stratification and treatment. Noticeably, lymphoma and multiple myeloma have more RAM-related research in comparison to acute leukaemia.47 Summary of the RAMs categorized under each haematological malignancy with a total population of 20,383 patients, and their performance is provided in Table 5.
Table 5

RAM in Haematological Malignancies; Cohort and Performance

RAMSubtypeNoPerformance
Leukaemia
KRS55AML867 AMLSuboptimal performance (P = 0.19)
ISTH-DIC8AML/APL272(adult)+ 132 (elderly) AML/63APLGood performance, HR 4.79 (1.71–13.45)/ (P = 0.001).
AL Ani et al scoreAML/APL/ALL501Good performance C-statistic of 0.664 (95% CI: 0.590–0.738)
Lymphoma
KRS31Multiple validation studiesUnable stratify low risk patients
ThroLy score56,57All subtypes1820 (derivation)+428(validation)Inadequate discrimination
Hohaus el al. score58All subtypes857Identified 82% of VTE but needs validation
TiC-Lympho59All subtypes254AUC 0.783; however, a feasibility trial needed
CATSCORE18All subtypes249 in derivationNeeds validation
Multiple myeloma (MM)
IMPEDE VTE60 scoreMMDerivation 4446Validation 4256Good performanceoutperformed the current IMWG/NCCN guidelines (p < 0.0001)
SAVED Score61MMDerivation (2397) validation (1251)Good performance (p < 0.01)
ROADMAP-CAT-MM score62MM144Good performance, Feasibility validation trial required
KRS60MM2874Poor prediction value c-statistic 0.52
RAM in Haematological Malignancies; Cohort and Performance

Acute Leukaemia

A misconception that thrombosis risk in patients with leukaemia was lower than that of solid tumours48 is being replaced by recent studies which showed the incidence of thrombosis to be similar or even higher than in those with solid tumours.49 The prevalence of thrombosis in acute myelocytic leukemia (AML) varies. In a cohort of 5394 cases, the largest cohort of AML, the 2-year cumulative incidence of deep vein thrombosis and/or pulmonary embolism was 5.2%.47 While acute promyelocytic leukemia (APL), the incidence of thrombosis increases to 10–15% compared to other types of acute myeloid leukaemia due to distinct molecular, morphologic, clinical characteristics, procoagulant and fibrinolytic properties of pathological promyelocytes.50 In acute lymphocytic leukemia (ALL), a study conducted by Ku et al among 2482 cases with ALL, the 2-year incidence of VTE was 4.5%. Also, as reported by Grace et al, the ratio could increase to 42% in adults with ALL during chemotherapy.51,52 This significantly increased risk is attributed to asparaginase and central venous catheters, being major risk factors for thrombosis in ALL. Other risk factors are older age and the number of chronic comorbidities.51,53 Risk assessment models in leukemia are as follows:

Khorana Score

In a study conducted by Mirza et al, 867 AML patients were included from 2000 to 2018. There was no statistically significant increment in the risk of thrombosis associated with a higher KRS in AML patients with a KRS of 1 to 3. Of notice, only a few patients were found to have a KRS > 3. This was mainly due to cytopenias that are common in AML. Therefore, Khorana was not the optimum risk score for AML.55

Al-Ani et al Risk Assessment Rule

A risk assessment model was developed by Al-Ani et al in a cohort of 501 leukemia patients, of these, 74 were having ALL. It is a simple score with three components, previous history of VTE (three points), ALL (two points) and platelet count >50 x 109 (one point). A score of three and more indicates a high risk. The score is statistically significant with a C-statistic of 0.664 (95% CI: 0.590–0.738) and ongoing external validation.49

International Society on Thrombosis and Haemostasis Disseminated Intravascular Coagulation Score (ISTH DIC)

The score which was initially derived for DIC risk assessment was investigated in a prospective study in a cohort of 272 adult patients by Libourel et al, and it was noted that it significantly predicted arterial and venous thrombosis with a hazard ratio (HR) for a high DIC score (‡5) of 4.79 (1.71–13.45).63 A validation cohort of 132 elderly patients with AML confirmed the finding (HR 11.08 [3.23–38.06]).63 D-dimer levels were the most predictive for thrombosis. This study excluded APL, which is highly associated with DIC. In another cohort by Mitrovic et al, 63 consecutive de novo APL patients were included. Thrombosis events were reported in 13 cases (20.6%). Initial ISTH DIC score was predictive for venous TE (P = 0.001).50 However, in a study by Al-Ani et al, the parameters were not predictive of thrombosis, but that study lacked D-dimer level sampling.49 Table 6 present the parameters and their assigned scores for the ISTH DIC score.
Table 6

ISTH DIC Score

VariableValuePoints
Platelet count>100 x 109/L0 Points
>50 - <100 x 109/L1 Points
<50 x 109/L2 Points
INR<1.30 Points
1.3–1.71 Points
>1.72 Points
D-dimer<4000 Points
400–40001 Points
>40002 Points
Fibrinogen level>1.0 g/L0 Points
<1.0 g/L1 Point
ISTH DIC Score

Lymphoma

Lymphomas are the most prevalent haematological malignancies globally and at higher VTE risk than different cancer types, particularly solid tumours.64 Aggressive lymphomas occur in 10–15% incidence of CAT in the first year of diagnosis.65 Hodgkin lymphoma (HL) accounts for nearly 10% of all lymphomas. Thrombosis events vary from 5.0% to 59.5% in lymphomas and are more significant in non-Hodgkin than in HL.66 As with other haematological malignancies, anticoagulation for treatment or prophylaxis is challenging because of the thrombocytopenia, which is either disease-related or treatment-related. In the recent Cassini trial that compared rivaroxaban 10 mg once-daily versus placebo for prophylaxis of outpatients with Khorana score (≥2) receiving chemotherapy, 7% were lymphoma cases. The findings showed reductions of approximately 60% of thrombotic events.36 Risk assessment models for thrombosis risk in lymphoma are more than other haematological malignancies. Examples of RAMs for lymphoma are as follows: In the initial cohort during the development of the score, 12.6% had lymphomas. Subsequently, several studies have specifically studied KRS in lymphoma. The majority of them concluded that the KRS did not adequately predict VTE events in patients at a higher VTE risk. However, in a pooled analysis of 12 lymphoma studies by Santi et al, the findings showed that a Khorana score of 3 and more was associated with VTE incidence.31 Later, several Khorana modification scores were developed; however, lymphoma patients were not represented.65,67,68

Thrombosis Lymphoma- ThroLy Score

ThroLy is a disease-specific RAM developed by Antic et al, as shown in Table 7. The study population was 1820 lymphoma patients. The model produced a negative predictive value of 98.5%, a positive predictive value of 25.1%, a sensitivity of 75.4%, and a specificity of 87.5%. A high-risk score had a positive predictive value of 65.2%.69 However, a validation study by Rupa-Matysek et al with 428 patients retrospectively concluded that the ThroLy score was not the most accurate model for predicting CAT in a high-risk population where 48% of VTE occurred in the low-risk group.57 In another validation study by Onur Kirkizlar et al involved a cohort of 150 adult patients with HL; the results raise the same issue of inadequacy of discrimination of the risk groups where nearly one-half of the VTE incident was in the low ThroLy score.66
Table 7

ThroLy Score

Patient CharacteristicsAssigned Score
Previous VTE/acute myocardial infarction/stroke2
Reduced mobility (ECOG 2‐4),1
Obesity (BMI > 30 kg/m2)2
Extranodal localization1
Mediastinal involvement2
Neutrophils <1 × 109/L1
Hemoglobin level <100 g/L1
ThroLy Score

Hohaus et al Score

A simple risk assessment score was developed by Hohaus et al and investigated 857 adult patients with newly diagnosed lymphomas. It includes three factors, CNS disease, bulky mass, and performance status. The score recognized 82% of CAT in the high-risk patients, 48% of patients of the total population; however, this score needs further validation.58,65

TiC-ONCO-Associated Lymphoma Score (TiC-Lympho)

A lymphoma-specific RAM was developed as a variant of the TIC-ONCO score for solid organ tumours risk stratification. The F5 rs6025, F5 rs4524, F13 rs5985, SERPINA10 rs2232698, additionally some clinical variables (immobilization, Ann Arbor stage mediastinum extension, tumour type, and personal thrombotic history) were significantly related to CAT. The study found that incorporating genetic-clinical data to assess VTE risk is relevant to lymphoma. The predictive capacity for VTE in the lymphoma population exceeds that achieved by the Khorana and ThroLy scores.59 However, a validation study is required, especially to ascertain the applicability of using genetic parameters in a real-life setting.

Cancer and Thrombosis Study (CATS) Score

The CATS cohort included 249 patients with lymphoma (17%), while the validation cohort of 832 patients did not contain lymphoma patients. It combined tumour-site category and D-dimer values to develop a simple RAM. Despite the statistical significance, a proper lymphoma validation cohort is required.

Multiple Myeloma

Multiple myeloma differs from other haematological malignancies by establishing recommendations in the existing 2014 international Myeloma Working Group (IMWG) guidelines and 2016 European Myeloma Network (EMN) guidelines that recommend standard risk stratification for MM patients on immunomodulatory drug-based therapy (IMiDs).70 The use of aspirin for low-risk patients and prophylactic dose LMWH for higher-risk patients is already recognized. However, the current evidence shows that the rate of VTE remains high, and a better risk tool is needed.70,71 Risk assessment scores for multiple myeloma are as follows:

IMPEDE VTE Score

Risk score in newly diagnosed multiple myeloma patients was developed by Sanfilippo et al in a cohort of 4446 using time-to-event analyses. It was then validated in a cohort of 4256 patients. VTE risk proportionally increased with the score (hazard ratio [HR], 1.20; p < 0.0001). Statistically, it outperformed the current IMWG/NCCN guidelines; however, a real-life prospective validation is required before replacing this scoring system with the current guidelines. The RAM consists of (Immunomodulatory agent; Body Mass Index ≥25 kg/m2; Pelvic, hip, or femur fracture; Erythropoietin stimulating agent; Dexamethasone/Doxorubicin; Asian Ethnicity/Race; VTE history; Tunnelled line/central venous catheter; Existing thromboprophylaxis).72

SAVED Score

A new RAM was developed in a separate analysis of older patients receiving IMiDs with a derivation population of 2397 and a validation study of 1251. It is a 5-point score that includes Asian ethnicity/race, prior surgery, age ≥80 years, VTE history, and dexamethasone dose. It stratified around 30% of patients in both cohorts as high risk. HRs were 1.85 (p < 0.01) and 1.98 (p < 0.01) for high- versus low-risk groups in the derivation and validation cohorts, respectively, and similarly outperformed the guidelines. A prospective real-life cohort validation is needed.61

ROADMAP-CAT-MM Score

In a study involving 144 patients in a prospective risk assessment to detect patients with MM at risk for CAT, the findings demonstrated that longer Procoagulant phospholipid clotting time (Procoagulant-PPL) and lower endogenous thrombin potential (ETP) could significantly predict thrombosis. However, a powered study is required for validation.

Khorana Score

In a MM validation cohort that enrolled 2874 patients with a six month follow up, Khorana score failed to predict VTE accurately.60

Conclusions and Practice Points

The risk of venous thromboembolism VTE is up to 7-fold higher in cancer patients.2 Cancer-associated thrombosis (CAT) is the second prevalent cause of mortality in cancer patients. Thromboprophylaxis in ambulatory cancer patients is associated with a 50% decrement of CAT occurrence in a high-risk population,3 hence the need to stratify patients to high and low risk. Since 2008, numerous RAM has been developed. In solid organ malignancy, to our knowledge, nine risk assessment scores were generated. The first and most known Khorana risk score still offers the best available risk assessment model when used with the threshold of 2 and above as a cut point for high-risk populations.11 However, KRS has two major limitations: failure to stratify low-risk patients and performing poorly in certain malignancy subtypes such as lung, urothelial, and haematological malignancies. ONKOTEV score is a Khorana score modification with better performance and easy applicability but shares the same limitation as KRS.41 The addition of genetic factors to stratify patients, although promising, is faced by the applicability restrains.28 The lung carcinoma population has a higher prevalence of thrombosis than other subtypes. The risk assessment model aims to stratify lung malignancy patients. The COMPASS-CAT score performed the best.24 If a large cohort trial confirmed the current finding, it should be used as a standard of care. In testicular germ cell tumour Bezan et al RAM is a validated good discriminatory RAM for this malignancy subtype.46 Cancer-associated thrombosis in haematological malignancy is under-investigated. Thrombosis in these subtypes has multiple confounding factors such as disease-related factors, eg, thrombocytopenia, and treatment-related factors like Treatment with l asparaginase. In acute leukaemia, Al-Ani et al developed a simple predictive tool that may be used as standard of care but is awaiting ongoing external validation.49 Despite the availability of different disease-specific scores in lymphoma-related thrombosis, in multiple myeloma, both SAVED and IMPEDED VTE scores performed better than currently used guidelines and can be used in risk stratification of patients with MM.61,72 The guidelines already recommend the thromboprophylaxis of high-risk patients, given the significant reduction in mortality and morbidity. Using the KRS, which is already proved to have a substantial limitation, has considerably reduced the VTE burden. Therefore, a better RAM is likely to have a more favourable outcome. Meanwhile, the clinician knowledge and application remain limited mainly due to the lack of a standard score or easily accessible system that calculates different risks. We believe that the currently allocated risk factors might be sufficient to stratify the patient. Having a pan-cancerous score for all types of malignancy might be challenging to achieve because of the broad disease characteristics. The future research should be directed to focus on the applicability rather than derivation of new parameters that later on would be faced with the limitation of feasibility and availability in solid organ malignancy; we looked at the different RAM components, the similarities with one or two factors distinctive for each score. Some of these factors are very academic or not readily practised in the general clinical setting others easy applicable. We suggest using all these feasible and practical factors to create a new combined score that might have better sensitivity and specificity and has less limitation to have better RAM. Future research could be directed to examine the use of telemedicine applications to help in patients’ risk stratification and treatment guidance considering the current changes in the healthcare delivery model imposed by the covid19 pandemic.
  65 in total

1.  Disseminated intravascular coagulation at diagnosis is a strong predictor for thrombosis in acute myeloid leukemia.

Authors:  Eduard J Libourel; Clara P W Klerk; Yvette van Norden; Moniek P M de Maat; Marieke J Kruip; Pieter Sonneveld; Bob Löwenberg; Frank W G Leebeek
Journal:  Blood       Date:  2016-06-28       Impact factor: 22.113

2.  Predictors of Venous Thromboembolism and Early Mortality in Lung Cancer: Results from a Global Prospective Study (CANTARISK).

Authors:  Nicole M Kuderer; Marek S Poniewierski; Eva Culakova; Gary H Lyman; Alok A Khorana; Ingrid Pabinger; Giancarlo Agnelli; Howard A Liebman; Eric Vicaut; Guy Meyer; Frances A Shepherd
Journal:  Oncologist       Date:  2017-09-26

Review 3.  Venous thromboembolism incidence in hematologic malignancies.

Authors:  Natasha Kekre; Jean M Connors
Journal:  Blood Rev       Date:  2018-06-21       Impact factor: 8.250

4.  Cancer-Associated Venous Thromboembolic Disease, Version 1.2015.

Authors:  Michael B Streiff; Bjorn Holmstrom; Aneel Ashrani; Paula L Bockenstedt; Carolyn Chesney; Charles Eby; John Fanikos; Randolph B Fenninger; Annemarie E Fogerty; Shuwei Gao; Samuel Z Goldhaber; Paul Hendrie; Nicole Kuderer; Alfred Lee; Jason T Lee; Mirjana Lovrincevic; Michael M Millenson; Anne T Neff; Thomas L Ortel; Rita Paschal; Sanford Shattil; Tanya Siddiqi; Kristi J Smock; Gerald Soff; Tzu-Fei Wang; Gary C Yee; Anaadriana Zakarija; Nicole McMillian; Anita M Engh
Journal:  J Natl Compr Canc Netw       Date:  2015-09       Impact factor: 11.908

5.  Prediction of venous thromboembolism in cancer patients.

Authors:  Cihan Ay; Daniela Dunkler; Christine Marosi; Alexandru-Laurentiu Chiriac; Rainer Vormittag; Ralph Simanek; Peter Quehenberger; Christoph Zielinski; Ingrid Pabinger
Journal:  Blood       Date:  2010-09-09       Impact factor: 22.113

6.  Predictors and clinical outcomes for spontaneous rupture of hepatocellular carcinoma.

Authors:  Qian Zhu; Jing Li; Jian-Jun Yan; Liang Huang; Meng-Chao Wu; Yi-Qun Yan
Journal:  World J Gastroenterol       Date:  2012-12-28       Impact factor: 5.742

7.  Development of a Clinical Prediction Rule for Venous Thromboembolism in Patients with Acute Leukemia.

Authors:  Fatimah Al-Ani; Yimin Pearl Wang; Alejandro Lazo-Langner
Journal:  Thromb Haemost       Date:  2020-01-01       Impact factor: 5.249

Review 8.  Venous Thromboembolism in Patients Diagnosed With Lung Cancer.

Authors:  E Salla; Evangelos P Dimakakos; S Tsagkouli; I Giozos; A Charpidou; E Kainis; K N Syrigos
Journal:  Angiology       Date:  2015-11-09       Impact factor: 3.619

9.  Comparison of risk prediction scores for venous thromboembolism in cancer patients: a prospective cohort study.

Authors:  Nick van Es; Marcello Di Nisio; Gabriela Cesarman; Ankie Kleinjan; Hans-Martin Otten; Isabelle Mahé; Ineke T Wilts; Desirée C Twint; Ettore Porreca; Oscar Arrieta; Alain Stépanian; Kirsten Smit; Michele De Tursi; Suzanne M Bleker; Patrick M Bossuyt; Rienk Nieuwland; Pieter W Kamphuisen; Harry R Büller
Journal:  Haematologica       Date:  2017-05-26       Impact factor: 9.941

10.  Risk factors for venous thromboembolism in patients with lymphoma requiring hospitalization.

Authors:  Stefan Hohaus; Maria Chiara Tisi; Francesca Bartolomei; Annarosa Cuccaro; Elena Maiolo; Eleonora Alma; Francesco D'Alò; Silvia Bellesi; Elena Rossi; Valerio De Stefano
Journal:  Blood Cancer J       Date:  2018-06-07       Impact factor: 11.037

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  1 in total

1.  Risk of Cardiovascular Disease in Women With and Without Breast Cancer: The Pathways Heart Study.

Authors:  Heather Greenlee; Carlos Iribarren; Jamal S Rana; Richard Cheng; Mai Nguyen-Huynh; Eileen Rillamas-Sun; Zaixing Shi; Cecile A Laurent; Valerie S Lee; Janise M Roh; Margarita Santiago-Torres; Hanjie Shen; Dawn L Hershman; Lawrence H Kushi; Romain Neugebauer; Marilyn L Kwan
Journal:  J Clin Oncol       Date:  2022-04-06       Impact factor: 50.717

  1 in total

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