| Literature DB >> 34335052 |
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.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
Inclusion Criteria
| Category | Inclusion Criteria |
|---|---|
| Language of publication | English |
| Year of publication | JAN 2008–JAN 2021 |
| Publication type | Original research articles |
| Outcomes measures | Risk assessment model discriminative performance |
| Methodology | Studies of derivation, validation, or comparison of risk assessment models were eligible for inclusion |
| Patients | Ambulatory active cancer patients. |
RAM in Solid Organ Malignancy Components and Scores
| Patients Characteristics | KRS | ONKOTEV Score | PROTECHT Score | CONKO Score | Vienna-CATS Score | TicOnco Score | New-CATS Score | COMPASS -CAT Score | The MDACC CAT |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pancreatic or gastric cancer (very high-risk tutors) | 2 | KRS ≥2= 1 | 2 | 2 | 2 | 2 | Tumour site | Cancer type + | |
| Lung, gynaecological, lymphoma, bladder, or testicular (high-risk tutors) | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | ||||
| Prechemotherapy haemoglobin <110 g/L or use of erythropoietin | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | ||||
| Prechemotherapy leucocyte count >11×109/L | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | ||||
| Prechemotherapy platelet count >350 G/L | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 2 | |||
| Body mass index ≥35 kg/m2 | 1 | 1 | - | 1 | 1 | ||||
| Previous venous thromboembolism | 1 | 1 | |||||||
| Metastatic disease/advance | 1 | 2 | + | ||||||
| Vascular/lymphatic macroscopic compression (detected by MRI) | 1 | ||||||||
| World Health Organization performance status >2 | 1 | ||||||||
| D-dimer>1.44 μg/L | 1 | + | |||||||
| Soluble P-selectin>53.1 ng/L | 1 | ||||||||
| Single nucleotide polymorphism | 1 | ||||||||
| Gemcitabine chemotherapy | 1 | ||||||||
| Platinum-based chemotherapy | 1 | + | |||||||
| Use of erythrocyte stimulating agent (ESA) | + | ||||||||
| Time since cancer diagnosis<6 months | 4 | ||||||||
| Central venous catheter | 3 | ||||||||
| 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 | ||||||||
| Hospitalization | 5 | ||||||||
| High risk ≥3, Intermediate risk 1–2, Low risk 0 | Nomogram scaling | ≤6:low/Intermediate,>7: high risk | Nomogram scaling | ||||||
Figure 1Flowchart for selecting the studies included in the scoping review.
RAM in Solid Organ Malignancy; Populations, Statistics, Advantages, and Disadvantages
| RAM (Year) | Population | Type of Malignancy | Parameters | C Statistics/ HR | Validation Cohort | Advantages/Disadvantages |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Khorana risk score (2008) | Derivation cohort, n = 2701 | Breast, Lung, Ovarian, Sarcoma, Colon, and Lymphomas | Site 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 more | 0.7 for both cohorts | More than 55 validation cohorts and several systematic reviews. | Advantages: Good in classifying high-risk. |
| Vienna Cancer and Thrombosis Study (CATS) Score(2018) | n = 819 | Breast, Lung, Stomach, Colorectal, Pancreas, Kidney, Prostate, Brain, Lymphoma, Multiple myeloma | Adds soluble P-selectin and D-dimer to KRS | 1.9 per 1 point increase | Comparison study with no statistical significance | Disadvantages: Applicability in p soluble monitoring in a real-life setting might not be feasible |
| New Vienna (CATSCORE) | CATS cohort, n = 1423 | Breast, Prostate, Lung, Colorectal, Esophagus, Kidney, Lymphoma, Bladder or urothelial, Uterine, Cervical, Ovarian, Pancreas, Stomach | Site of cancer and D-dimer | 0.66 in CATS | Comparison study with no statistical significance | Advantages: only two factors score |
| PROTECHT Score (2012) | Placebo arm, n = 381 | Gastrointestinal, Lung, Breast, Ovary, Pancreas, Head and Neck | Add gemcitabine, cisplatin, or carboplatin therapy to KRS | NA | 1 study with positive | Advantages: easy to use, considers treatment-related risk factors |
| CONKO004(2015) | n= 312 | NA | Replace BMI in KRS with performance status | NA | Two comparison study with negative outcome* | Advantage: easy applicability |
| ONKOTEV Score(2017) | n = 843 | Khorana score >2, personal history of VTE, metastatic disease, vascular/lymphatic macroscopic compression | C-statistic:0.719 at 3 months | Multiple validation and comparison trials with negative outcome.* | Advantages: easy to apply, consider tumour-related factors | |
| The COMPASS-CAT score(2016) | n = 1023 | Breast, Colorectal, Lung, or Ovarian cancer | Anthracycline 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 count | C statistic: 0.850 | Multiple validation. | Advantages: Good performance in lung carcinoma, |
| Tic-ONCO score(2018) | n = 391 | Adds genetic risk score to KS | C-statistic 0.73 | NA | Disadvantages: Application of genetics in a real-life setting is questionable | |
| The MDACC CAT model | n= 548 | Breast, Gastrointestinal non-pancreas, Pancreas, Genitourinary non-kidney Kidney, Gynaecological Lung and head/neck Lymphoma | Presence of metastasis, use of platinum-based chemotherapy, the use of ESAs and malignancies of origin in the gastrointestinal, gynecologic, and head-neck/lung organs | C-index: 0.74 | NA | Advantages: readily available information |
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.
Different RAM in Lung Carcinoma Components, Statistics, and Performances
| RAM | KRS | COMPASS-CAT | ROADMAP‐CAT Biomarker Score | COMPASS-CAT ROADMAP | CANTARISK Score |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Parameters | Site 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 more | Anthracycline 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 history | The procoagulant phospholipid‐dependent clotting time (Procoag‐PPL) and the mean rate index (MRI) of the propagation phase of thrombin generation assay | Procoag‐ PPL and MRI with the COMPASS‐CAT RAM | Older age, current or former smokers, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, ECOG PS ≥2, no prior cancer surgery, and metastatic disease are predictive of VTE |
| Type | Pan cancerous | Breast, Colorectal, Lung or Ovarian cancer | Lung | Lung | Lung |
| Statistics | Unable to stratify (1.1; | C statistic 0.89 | (NPV) 97% | (NPV) 97% | p<0.0001 |
| Performance | KRS underperformed in risk stratification in lung ca. | Excellent performance in small cohort, need large cohort validation | Applicability of special blood assays in real life setting need to be considered | Applicability of special blood assays in real life setting need to be considered | Need 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.
RAM in Haematological Malignancies; Cohort and Performance
| RAM | Subtype | No | Performance |
|---|---|---|---|
| Leukaemia | |||
| KRS | AML | 867 AML | Suboptimal performance (P = 0.19) |
| ISTH-DIC | AML/APL | 272(adult)+ 132 (elderly) AML/63APL | Good performance, HR 4.79 (1.71–13.45)/ (P = 0.001). |
| AL Ani et al score | AML/APL/ALL | 501 | Good performance C-statistic of 0.664 (95% CI: 0.590–0.738) |
| Lymphoma | |||
| KRS | Multiple validation studies | Unable stratify low risk patients | |
| ThroLy score | All subtypes | 1820 (derivation)+428(validation) | Inadequate discrimination |
| Hohaus el al. score | All subtypes | 857 | Identified 82% of VTE but needs validation |
| TiC-Lympho | All subtypes | 254 | AUC 0.783; however, a feasibility trial needed |
| CATSCORE | All subtypes | 249 in derivation | Needs validation |
| Multiple myeloma (MM) | |||
| IMPEDE VTE | MM | Derivation 4446 | Good performance |
| SAVED Score | MM | Derivation (2397) validation (1251) | Good performance (p < 0.01) |
| ROADMAP-CAT-MM score | MM | 144 | Good performance, Feasibility validation trial required |
| KRS | MM | 2874 | Poor prediction value c-statistic 0.52 |
ISTH DIC Score
| Variable | Value | Points |
|---|---|---|
| Platelet count | >100 x 109/L | 0 Points |
| >50 - <100 x 109/L | 1 Points | |
| <50 x 109/L | 2 Points | |
| INR | <1.3 | 0 Points |
| 1.3–1.7 | 1 Points | |
| >1.7 | 2 Points | |
| D-dimer | <400 | 0 Points |
| 400–4000 | 1 Points | |
| >4000 | 2 Points | |
| Fibrinogen level | >1.0 g/L | 0 Points |
| <1.0 g/L | 1 Point |
ThroLy Score
| Patient Characteristics | Assigned Score |
|---|---|
| Previous VTE/acute myocardial infarction/stroke | 2 |
| Reduced mobility (ECOG 2‐4), | 1 |
| Obesity (BMI > 30 kg/m2) | 2 |
| Extranodal localization | 1 |
| Mediastinal involvement | 2 |
| Neutrophils <1 × 109/L | 1 |
| Hemoglobin level <100 g/L | 1 |