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Auto Anti-coagulation and VTE Prophylaxis

Auto Anti-coagulation and VTE Prophylaxis. Hilary Rowe, BScPharm VIHA Pharmacy Resident 2009-10 Internal Medicine Rotation November 5th, 2009. Outline. Objectives Patient Case Background Clinical Question Review of Evidence Recommendation Monitoring. Objectives.

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Auto Anti-coagulation and VTE Prophylaxis

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  1. Auto Anti-coagulation and VTE Prophylaxis Hilary Rowe, BScPharm VIHA Pharmacy Resident 2009-10 Internal Medicine Rotation November 5th, 2009

  2. Outline • Objectives • Patient Case • Background • Clinical Question • Review of Evidence • Recommendation • Monitoring

  3. Objectives • Review pathophysiology for auto anti-coagulation & clinical presentation • Discuss evidence of auto anti-coagulation • Discuss therapeutic options for VTE prophylaxis

  4. Mr. JE • ID: 33 yo Caucasian male, ht 170cm, wt 55kg • CC: ER by ambulance Sept 1/09 for weakness & falls-jaundice, ascites • HPI Oct 19/09: Small esophageal varices, ascites • PMHx: chronic lower back pain, alcohol abuse x 14 years

  5. Mr. JE • Meds PTA: None • Allergies: None • SH: Homeless, estranged from family, smoker (30 pack yr hx), drinks 26 oz (780mL) vodka a day x 14 yrs • Discharge Plan: To family

  6. Review of Systems

  7. Review of Systems

  8. Review of Systems

  9. Review of Systems

  10. Medical Problems List • Alcohol addiction • Alcoholic cirrhosis • Ascites • Esophageal varices • Anemia of chronic disease & iron deficiency anemia • Chronic lower back pain

  11. DRP’s • JE is at increased risk of COPD, CVD and cancer secondary to smoking, requiring tobacco cessation counseling • JE has a mixed anemia secondary to iron deficiency and anemia of chronic disease, requiring monitoring of his anemia therapy

  12. DRP’s • JE is at an increased risk of VTE requiring assessment of his need for DVT prophylaxis despite his elevated INR of 1.9

  13. Alcoholic Liver Cirrhosis • Decrease in pro-coagulants • Can’t make II, VII, IX, X • Decrease in anti-coagulants • Can’t make Protein C, S & antithrombin III • PT & INR measures activity of pro-coagulants and doesn’t capture changes in anti-coagulants • PT does not predict bleeding risk

  14. Risk Factors For VTE • Recent surgery or major trauma • Immobility or paralysis • Malignancy • Previous VTE • >80 years • Smoking • Varicose veins • Inherited or acquired thrombophilia

  15. CTU Discussion Rounds • Team discussed that patient had been in hospital for a significant amount of time and might need VTE prophylaxis • Team wanted to know if his elevated INR of 1.9 would protect him?

  16. Clinical Question

  17. Search Strategy • PubMed, Embase, Google • Search terms: • Liver cirrhosis • Risk of Thromboembolism • DVT, Pulmonary embolism • Auto anticoagulation • Found • 2 retrospective case control studies

  18. Northup et al. Am J Gastroenterol 2006

  19. Northup et al. Am J Gastroenterol 2006

  20. Northup et al. Am J Gastroenterol 2006 • Lower albumin in patients with VTE • *38-53g/L normal, 1g/dL=10g/L • Elevated INR did not protect patients from VTE

  21. Northup et al. Am J Gastroenterol 2006 • Results: • VTE in cirrhosis patients 113/21,000 (0.5%) • -74/113 (65.5%) DVT • -22/113 (19.5%) PE • -17/113 (15%) Both DVT & PE • -Serum albumin independently predicts VTE (p<0.001, OR 0.24 95% CI 0.10-0.55)

  22. Northup et al. Am J Gastroenterol 2006

  23. Northup et al. Am J Gastroenterol 2006 Conclusions • Deficiencies of antithrombin III, protein C & protein S are associated with ↑ risk of VTE • Serum albumin may be indicator for level of proteins made by liver such as Antithrombin III, protein C & S ↑ INR does not decrease risk of VTE

  24. Sogaard et al. Am J Gastroenterol 2009

  25. Sogaard et al. Am J Gastroenterol 2009 • Unprovoked VTE=patient without diagnosis of cancer before or within 90 days of VTE, or diagnosis of fracture, trauma, surgery, pregnancy 90 days before VTE • Each case matched with 5 population controls without a VTE by age, gender, county • Patients with several VTE’s had their first event used

  26. Sogaard et al. Am J Gastroenterol 2009

  27. Sogaard et al. Am J Gastroenterol 2009 Results • 20% (99,444/496,872) had a VTE • 22% (67,519/308,614) had unprovoked VTE

  28. Sogaard et al. Am J Gastroenterol 2009 Limits • Retrospective • Relied on coding of Danish nationwide registry for diagnosis of VTE • No data on lifestyle factors • Declining risk of VTE in past 10 years • Is this due to prophylaxis?

  29. Sogaard et al. Am J Gastroenterol 2009 Conclusion • Both cirrhotic and non-cirrhotic liver disease are risk factors for VTE

  30. Goals of Therapy Patients Goals • Abstinent from alcohol Team Goals • Prevent VTE • Prevent hospitalization • Decrease morbidity & mortality • Minimize adverse drug events • Keep patient abstinent (quality of life) • Find housing (quality of life)

  31. Therapeutic Options • No DVT prophylaxis • Sequential compression devices • Heparin 5000 units sc bid • Dalteparin 5000 units sc daily

  32. Recommendation • Dalteparin 5000 units subcutaneous daily • Try to mobilize patient as soon as possible • Initiate smoking cessation counseling

  33. Monitoring

  34. Monitoring

  35. summary Summary Question: Does elevated INR protect patient from a VTE? Answer: • ↑ INR does not decrease risk of VTE • ↓ albumin independently predicts VTE risk Future: • Study VTE prophylaxis in this population & predict benefit & risk of bleed

  36. Questions?

  37. References • Northup PG, McMahon MM, Ruhl AP et al. Coagulopathy does not fully protect hospitalized cirrhosis patients from peripheral venous thromboebolism. Am J Gastroenterol 2006;101:1523-28. • Sogaard KK, Horvath-Puho E, Gronbaek H et al. Risk of venous thromboembolism in patients with liver disease: a nationwide population-based case-control study. Am J Gastroenterol 2009;104:96-101.

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