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Venous Thromboembolism In Cancer Patients VTE Nabeel Rajeh, MD

VTE IN CANCER PATIENTS First described by Trousseau 1865 Hypercoagulability related to cancer Procoagulant, vessel wall damage, stasis and immobilization,

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Page 1: VTE IN CANCER PATIENTS First described by Trousseau 1865 Hypercoagulability related to cancer Procoagulant, vessel wall damage, stasis and immobilization,

Venous ThromboembolismIn Cancer Patients

VTE

Nabeel Rajeh, MD

Page 2: VTE IN CANCER PATIENTS First described by Trousseau 1865 Hypercoagulability related to cancer Procoagulant, vessel wall damage, stasis and immobilization,

VTE IN CANCER PATIENTS

• First described by Trousseau 1865

• Hypercoagulability related to cancer• Procoagulant, vessel wall damage,

stasis and immobilization, chemotherapy, surgery, radiation,

• Underlying intrinsic hypercoagulability• Factor V leiden, antiphospholipid

syndrome

• 2-6 fold increase in risk of death

Page 3: VTE IN CANCER PATIENTS First described by Trousseau 1865 Hypercoagulability related to cancer Procoagulant, vessel wall damage, stasis and immobilization,
Page 4: VTE IN CANCER PATIENTS First described by Trousseau 1865 Hypercoagulability related to cancer Procoagulant, vessel wall damage, stasis and immobilization,
Page 5: VTE IN CANCER PATIENTS First described by Trousseau 1865 Hypercoagulability related to cancer Procoagulant, vessel wall damage, stasis and immobilization,
Page 6: VTE IN CANCER PATIENTS First described by Trousseau 1865 Hypercoagulability related to cancer Procoagulant, vessel wall damage, stasis and immobilization,

VENOUS THROMBOSIS IN CANCER PATIENTS FRONTLINE SURVEY

• first comprehensive global survey of thrombosis and cancer

• 3,891 completed responses were analyzed

• Brain and pancreatic tumors were a high risk for VTE

• 50% surgeons used thromboprophylaxis routinely

• 5% oncologists used thromboprophylaxis routinely

• Low molecular weight heparin (LMWH) was the most popular Aspirin for prophylaxis used in 20%

• LMWH use by as initial treatment for VTE as outpatient followed by VKA

• The results of the FRONTLINE survey demonstrate a need for guidelines to direct clinical practice in line with evidence-based data concerning cancer and VTE

Page 7: VTE IN CANCER PATIENTS First described by Trousseau 1865 Hypercoagulability related to cancer Procoagulant, vessel wall damage, stasis and immobilization,

Risk may be 1-35%

Page 8: VTE IN CANCER PATIENTS First described by Trousseau 1865 Hypercoagulability related to cancer Procoagulant, vessel wall damage, stasis and immobilization,
Page 9: VTE IN CANCER PATIENTS First described by Trousseau 1865 Hypercoagulability related to cancer Procoagulant, vessel wall damage, stasis and immobilization,
Page 10: VTE IN CANCER PATIENTS First described by Trousseau 1865 Hypercoagulability related to cancer Procoagulant, vessel wall damage, stasis and immobilization,
Page 11: VTE IN CANCER PATIENTS First described by Trousseau 1865 Hypercoagulability related to cancer Procoagulant, vessel wall damage, stasis and immobilization,
Page 12: VTE IN CANCER PATIENTS First described by Trousseau 1865 Hypercoagulability related to cancer Procoagulant, vessel wall damage, stasis and immobilization,

PREDICTORS OF VTE IN CANCER

• Anemia , Leukocytosis, Thrombocytosis

• History of VTE

• Hospitalization

• Infections

• Immobilization

• D-Dimer and P- Selectin

Page 13: VTE IN CANCER PATIENTS First described by Trousseau 1865 Hypercoagulability related to cancer Procoagulant, vessel wall damage, stasis and immobilization,

PREDICTORS OF VTE IN CANCER

• Adenoca compared to squamous cell ca

• Solid tumors as well as liquid tumors

• Certain treatment• Thalidomid, lenalidomide, doxorubicin, tamoxifen,

oral contraceptive, Dexamethasone erythropoietin, Bevacizumab

Page 14: VTE IN CANCER PATIENTS First described by Trousseau 1865 Hypercoagulability related to cancer Procoagulant, vessel wall damage, stasis and immobilization,

WHY CANCER PATIENT

• Patient with solid tumor and distant metastases has 20 fold increase VTE

• VTE second leading cause of cancer deaths

• Risk of bleeding is 13% compared with 4% in none cancer

• Significant early mortality if VTE

Page 15: VTE IN CANCER PATIENTS First described by Trousseau 1865 Hypercoagulability related to cancer Procoagulant, vessel wall damage, stasis and immobilization,

DIAGNOSIS OF VTE• Clinical prediction of risk

• Symptoms and signs

• D-Dimer testing to diagnose VTE is not recommended

• Duplex venous ultrasonography with compressibility and flow

• Indirect CT Venography

• MRI

• CTA for PE

• Invasive venography may be outdated

Page 16: VTE IN CANCER PATIENTS First described by Trousseau 1865 Hypercoagulability related to cancer Procoagulant, vessel wall damage, stasis and immobilization,

SUPERFICIAL VEIN THROMBOSIS

• Clinical diagnosis

• Must rule out DVT

• Trouseau Syndrome migratory SVT require UFH, or LMWH

• Treatment with 4 weeks LMWH if central catheter related

• NSAID

Page 17: VTE IN CANCER PATIENTS First described by Trousseau 1865 Hypercoagulability related to cancer Procoagulant, vessel wall damage, stasis and immobilization,

LMWH

• Dalteparin, Enoxaparin, Tinzaparin

• All inhibit Xa

• Therapeutically equivalent and Interchangeable

• RCT Tinzaparin compared to Dalteparin prove equality

• Immediate therapy and prophylaxis is FDA

• Continuation therapy require dose reduction?

• Concern in renal, obese, elderly, HIT,

Page 18: VTE IN CANCER PATIENTS First described by Trousseau 1865 Hypercoagulability related to cancer Procoagulant, vessel wall damage, stasis and immobilization,

FONDAPARINUX

• Specific Xa inhibitor

• No cross reaction with HIT

• Value in renal failure, obese, underweight, elderly is questionable

• Dosing once daily

Page 19: VTE IN CANCER PATIENTS First described by Trousseau 1865 Hypercoagulability related to cancer Procoagulant, vessel wall damage, stasis and immobilization,

UNFRACTIONATED HEPARIN

• Do we remember!

• SQ prophylaxis may be better than LMWH

• Bid or tid dosing

• Treatment based on weight 80u/kg/h

• Can be used with renal failure (liver metabolism)

• Risk of HIT

• Resistance

Page 20: VTE IN CANCER PATIENTS First described by Trousseau 1865 Hypercoagulability related to cancer Procoagulant, vessel wall damage, stasis and immobilization,

WARFARIN

• The advisable chronic therapy

• Concomitant with UFH or LMWH for 5 days

• PT INR monitoring

• Labile INR result

• Resistance to therapeutic INR (genetically interaction and none compliance)

Page 21: VTE IN CANCER PATIENTS First described by Trousseau 1865 Hypercoagulability related to cancer Procoagulant, vessel wall damage, stasis and immobilization,
Page 22: VTE IN CANCER PATIENTS First described by Trousseau 1865 Hypercoagulability related to cancer Procoagulant, vessel wall damage, stasis and immobilization,
Page 23: VTE IN CANCER PATIENTS First described by Trousseau 1865 Hypercoagulability related to cancer Procoagulant, vessel wall damage, stasis and immobilization,

INPATIENT PROPHYLACTIC THERAPY

• To all patients hospitalized with active cancer

• Or suspicious cancer

• Encourage ambulation although it is not enough prophylaxis

• LMWH, UFH, Fondaparinux are effective

• Low dose warfarin and adjusted to INR1.5-2 for port catheter or chemotherapy catheter are not recommended

• May extend for 4 week post discharge in very high risk patient

Page 24: VTE IN CANCER PATIENTS First described by Trousseau 1865 Hypercoagulability related to cancer Procoagulant, vessel wall damage, stasis and immobilization,
Page 25: VTE IN CANCER PATIENTS First described by Trousseau 1865 Hypercoagulability related to cancer Procoagulant, vessel wall damage, stasis and immobilization,

PROPHYLAXIS

• SHOULD AMBULATORY PATIENTS WITH CANCER RECEIVE ANTICOAGULATION FOR VTE PROPHYLAXIS DURING SYSTEMIC CHEMOTHERAPY

• Not at this time

Page 26: VTE IN CANCER PATIENTS First described by Trousseau 1865 Hypercoagulability related to cancer Procoagulant, vessel wall damage, stasis and immobilization,

TREATMENT OF VTE• Immediate LMWH, UFH, Fondaparinux for 5-10 days

• Followed by LMWH for 6 m in patient with active cancer

• LMWH beyond 6 m is not recommended

• Warfarin with close monitoring

• Meta-analysis LMWH reduce 3 m mortality comapred to UFH

• Recurrence VTE and major bleeding are higher with chronic warfarin compared to LMWH

Page 27: VTE IN CANCER PATIENTS First described by Trousseau 1865 Hypercoagulability related to cancer Procoagulant, vessel wall damage, stasis and immobilization,

WHAT IS THE BEST TREATMENT FOR PATIENTS WITH CANCER WITH ESTABLISHED VTE TO

PREVENT RECURRENT VTE?

• LMWH is the preferred approach for the initial 5 to 10 days of anticoagulant treatment of the cancer patient with established VTE.

• LMWH given for at least 6 months is also the preferred approach for long-term anticoagulant therapy. Vitamin K antagonists with a targeted INR of 2 to 3 are acceptable for long-term therapy when LMWH is not available

Page 28: VTE IN CANCER PATIENTS First described by Trousseau 1865 Hypercoagulability related to cancer Procoagulant, vessel wall damage, stasis and immobilization,
Page 29: VTE IN CANCER PATIENTS First described by Trousseau 1865 Hypercoagulability related to cancer Procoagulant, vessel wall damage, stasis and immobilization,
Page 30: VTE IN CANCER PATIENTS First described by Trousseau 1865 Hypercoagulability related to cancer Procoagulant, vessel wall damage, stasis and immobilization,
Page 31: VTE IN CANCER PATIENTS First described by Trousseau 1865 Hypercoagulability related to cancer Procoagulant, vessel wall damage, stasis and immobilization,
Page 32: VTE IN CANCER PATIENTS First described by Trousseau 1865 Hypercoagulability related to cancer Procoagulant, vessel wall damage, stasis and immobilization,
Page 33: VTE IN CANCER PATIENTS First described by Trousseau 1865 Hypercoagulability related to cancer Procoagulant, vessel wall damage, stasis and immobilization,
Page 34: VTE IN CANCER PATIENTS First described by Trousseau 1865 Hypercoagulability related to cancer Procoagulant, vessel wall damage, stasis and immobilization,

SHOULD PATIENTS WITH CANCER RECEIVE ANTICOAGULANTS IN THE ABSENCE OF

ESTABLISHED VTE TO IMPROVE SURVIVAL?

• Anticoagulants are not recommended to improve survival in patients with cancer without VTE.

Page 35: VTE IN CANCER PATIENTS First described by Trousseau 1865 Hypercoagulability related to cancer Procoagulant, vessel wall damage, stasis and immobilization,
Page 36: VTE IN CANCER PATIENTS First described by Trousseau 1865 Hypercoagulability related to cancer Procoagulant, vessel wall damage, stasis and immobilization,
Page 37: VTE IN CANCER PATIENTS First described by Trousseau 1865 Hypercoagulability related to cancer Procoagulant, vessel wall damage, stasis and immobilization,
Page 38: VTE IN CANCER PATIENTS First described by Trousseau 1865 Hypercoagulability related to cancer Procoagulant, vessel wall damage, stasis and immobilization,

HEPARIN INDUCED THROMBOCYTOPENIA

Page 39: VTE IN CANCER PATIENTS First described by Trousseau 1865 Hypercoagulability related to cancer Procoagulant, vessel wall damage, stasis and immobilization,

HIT

• Thrombocytopenia Timeing, Thrombosis, oThers

• PF4/antibodies detection and serotonin release assay

• Stop warfarin stop heparin no platelets

• Direct thrombin inhibitors lepirudin argatroban

• Fondaparinux

Page 40: VTE IN CANCER PATIENTS First described by Trousseau 1865 Hypercoagulability related to cancer Procoagulant, vessel wall damage, stasis and immobilization,
Page 41: VTE IN CANCER PATIENTS First described by Trousseau 1865 Hypercoagulability related to cancer Procoagulant, vessel wall damage, stasis and immobilization,
Page 42: VTE IN CANCER PATIENTS First described by Trousseau 1865 Hypercoagulability related to cancer Procoagulant, vessel wall damage, stasis and immobilization,

Thank You

Nabeel Rajeh, MDwww.syriaoncology.com