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Venous Thromboembolism Prophylaxis for Medical Inpatients Heather Hofmann, rev. 4/18/14 DSR2 Mini Lecture Objectives • Recognize that VTE carries high morbidity and mortality • Determine VTE risk for nonsurgical inpatient • Select VTE prophylaxis for the non-surgical inpatient Background VTE Venous Thromboembolism DVT Deep vein thrombosis PE Pulmonary embolism Most medical inpatients are at risk for VTE. – 25% of all VTE cases occur in the hospital – 50-75% occur on medicine – 5-10% of inpatient mortality are due to PE Heparin ppx – does NOT decrease inpatient mortality risk – DOES decrease PE incidence Determine Prophylaxis VTE risk Low Patient admitted Bleeding risk Early ambulation Determine risk of VTE Moderate Or High Low Anticoagulant prophylaxis High Intermittent pneumatic compression Determine bleeding risk Determine Prophylaxis VTE Risk Stratification Low If all 3: < 40yo Mobile No VTE risk factors (next slide) Moderate All other patients. High ICU patients. Bleeding Risk Stratification Low Moderate High Limited validated definitions; can determine “IMPROVE” risk Active GI bleed Bleed (GI, CVA…) < 3mos ago Platelets < 50K Risk Factors for VTE • • • • • • • • • Obesity: BMI > 30 Smoking Immobility Malignancy Previous VTE Presence of central venous catheter Inherited or acquired hypercoagulable states Oral contraceptives/Hormone replacement therapy/tamoxifen Admission diagnosis of: – Congestive heart failure (NYHA III/VI) – Acute COPD exacerbation – Acute infectious disease or sepsis – Acute myocardial infarction – Stroke with lower limb paralysis – Inflammatory bowel disease* Non-Pharmacologic Prophylaxis • AMBULATION – Use if low VTE risk! • MECHANICAL – Use if moderate-high VTE risk but high bleeding risk – Intermittent pneumatic compression (/SCDs/Sequentials) • Contraindicated in leg ischemia from PVD – Options ineffective in prevention of VTE: • Graduated compression stockings • Venous foot pumps Pharmacological VTE Prophylaxis Medication Dose Heparin Unfractionated (UFH) 5,000 units SQ q8h 5,000 units SQ q12h if elderly Enoxaparin (Lovenox) Low Molecular Weight (LMWH) 30-40mg SQ daily Contraindicated if CrCl < 30 mL/min What VTE prophylaxis would you use? 62 yo F is admitted for community acquired pneumonia. No prior history of VTE, bleeding, hepatic, or renal failure. Her platelet count is 200. VTE Risk? Moderate Bleeding Risk? Low VTE PPx: UFH or LMWH What VTE prophylaxis would you use? 35 yo M is admitted for acute gout. He is ambulatory. He has no prior VTE, GI bleed, thrombophilia, or malignancy. BMI 23. His platelet count is 240. VTE Risk? Low Bleeding Risk? Low VTE PPx: Early ambulation What VTE prophylaxis would you use? 21 yo F admitted to ICU for DKA from poor insulin compliance. She is ambulatory. She has no prior VTE, GI bleed, thrombophilia, or malignancy. Platelet count is 300. VTE Risk? High Bleeding Risk? Low VTE PPx: UFH or LMWH What VTE prophylaxis would you use? 65 yo F is admitted for treatment of an active malignancy. CrCl is 20 ml/min. She has a history of prior VTE but no history of bleeding, hepatic failure. Her platelet count is 250. VTE Risk? Moderate Bleeding Risk? Low VTE PPx: UFH Determine Prophylaxis VTE risk Low Patient admitted Bleeding risk Early ambulation Determine risk of VTE Moderate Or High Low Anticoagulant prophylaxis High Intermittent pneumatic compression Determine bleeding risk Determine Prophylaxis VTE Risk Stratification Low If all 3: < 40yo Mobile No VTE risk factors (next slide) Moderate All other patients. High ICU patients. Bleeding Risk Stratification Low Moderate High Limited validated definitions; can determine “IMPROVE” risk Active GI bleed Bleed (GI, CVA…) < 3mos ago Platelets < 50K Summary • Recognize VTE risk in all hospitalized patients. • Assess VTE risk with every admission • Use pharmacologic prophylaxis for patients with moderate to high risk of VTE • If pharmacologic prophylaxis is contraindicated due to high risk of bleeding, use ICD’s; do not use compression stockings. • AMBULATION for all at low risk of VTE. References Guyatt GH, et al. Executive Summary : Antithrombotic Therapy and Prevention of Thrombosis, 9th ed: American College of Chest Physicians Evidence-Based Clinical Practice Guidelines. Chest 2012;141;7S-47S. Francis, CW. Prophylaxis for Thromboembolism in Hospitalized Medical Patients. N Engl J Med 2007;356:1438-44. Pineo GF. Prevention of venous thromboembolic disease in medical patients. UpToDate, Mar 2012. Qaseem A, et al. Venous Thromboembolism Prophylaxis in Hospitalized Patients: A Clinical Practice Guideline From the American College of Physicians. Ann Intern Med. 2011;155:625-632. Decousus, H., Tapson, V. F., Bergmann, J.-F., Chong, B. H., Froehlich, J. B., Kakkar, A. K., … IMPROVE Investigators. (2011). Factors at admission associated with bleeding risk in medical patients: findings from the IMPROVE investigators. Chest, 139(1), 69–79. doi:10.1378/chest.09-3081 Effectiveness of thigh-length graduated compression stockings to reduce the risk of deep vein thrombosis after stroke (CLOTS trial 1): a multicentre, randomised controlled trial. (2009). The Lancet, 373(9679), 1958– 1965. doi:10.1016/S0140-6736(09)60941-7