Venous thromboembolism

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Epidemiology

  • 1/1000 individuals per year
    • 2/3 DVT, 1/3 PE
  • 50% of PEs unprovoked

Risk Factors

  • Demographic
    • Age
    • Sex
    • Race
    • BMI
  • Provoking factors
    • Surgery/trauma
    • Acute medical illness
    • Immobility
    • Hormonal therapy and pregnancy
    • Cancer and chemotherapy
  • Hereditary thrombophilias
  • Biochemical/Acquired conditions
    • Antiphospholipid antibody syndrome
    • Elevated Factor VIII

Clinical Presentation

History

  • Assess if it was provoked by a transient risk factor:
    • Surgery, hospitalization, or plaster cast immobilization within the last 3 months
    • Central venous catheter-associated VTE
    • Estrogen therapy, pregnancy, flight over 8 hours, recent leg injury or immobilization within the past 6 weeks

Signs & Symptoms

  • 3+ cm difference in calf circumference measured 10 cm below the tibial tuberosity
  • Dilated non-varicose veins
  • Tenderness over deep veins
  • Homan's sign: flexing the ankle causes calf pain (poor sensitivity and specificity)
  • Phlegmasia cerulea dolens

Well's Criteria for DVT (C3PO + R2D2)

  • Cancer within 6 months
  • Calf diameter increase >3 cm
  • Collateral superficial veins (non-varicose)
  • Pitting edema confined to symptomatic leg
  • Oedema of the entire leg
  • tenderness along deep venous system (t = + in mnemonic)
  • Recently bedridden for > 3 days
  • Recent immobilization of leg (cast, paralysis)
  • DVT in the past
  • Diagnosis other than DVT likely (2 points off)

Well's Criteria for PE

  • Tachycardia (> 100 bpm) 1.5 points
  • Hemoptysis 1 point
  • Immobilization (< 4wks) 1.5 points
  • Signs or symptoms of DVT 3 points
  • Active malignancy (<6/12) 1 point
  • Previous DVT or PE 1.5 points
  • Etiology most likely PE 3 point

Investigations

  • Generally don't screen for hereditary thrombophilias, as it does not change management
  • No need to screen for occult malignancies (based on SOME trial 2013
  • CBC, renal and liver function testing, chest X-ray
  • Age-appropriate cancer screening

Management

  • Anticoagulation
    • Acutely, can use unfractionated heparin infusions, if the patient may require interruption of therapy
    • Avoid long-term UFH, which is the only anticoagulant shown to have a higher risk of recurrence
  • Outpatient treatment options:
    • Warfarin 10/5/5 then INRs
    • DOACs
      • Apixaban 10mg BID x7d then 5mg BID x3wk then 2.5 BID
      • Rivaroxaban 15mg BID x21days then 20mg OD
      • Dabigatran requires LMWH induction, for some reason
    • Low-molecular weight heparins preferred in malignancy (CLOT trial)
  • Duration of treatment is 3 months if provoked or indefinitely if unprovoked
  • For long-term prophylaxis, can consider ASA or rivaroxaban 10mg (EPCAT II trial)
  • Thrombolysis of unclear benefit, but probably should be used if patient is unstable from PE
  • IVC filter
    • If there is a contraindication to anticoagulation
    • Probably only necessary if acute clot
    • Retrievable up to a year

Prognosis

  • High risk of recurrence for unprovoked VTE
  • After first unprovoked episode, cumulative incidence for recurrence is 16% at 2 years, 25% at 5 years, and 36% at 10 years.
    • Men have a 1.4x higher risk
    • Positive D-dimer has 2x higher risk
    • Proximal DVT 5x higher than distal DVT
    • Proximal DVT 1.4x higher than PE alone, and DVT + PE is 1.5x higher than PE alone
  • 4% case fatality with recurrent episode
  • Provoked is about a third the risk of unprovoked
    • The stronger the provoking factor (i.e. major surgery), the lower the recurrence risk

Further Reading