4.6 Review

Venous thromboembolism associated with central venous catheters in patients with cancer: From pathophysiology to thromboprophylaxis, areas for future studies

Journal

JOURNAL OF THROMBOSIS AND HAEMOSTASIS
Volume 19, Issue 11, Pages 2659-2673

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/jth.15487

Keywords

cancer-associated thrombosis; central venous catheter; thromboprophylaxis

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Symptomatic catheter related thrombosis (CRT) occurs in 4%-8% of cancer patients, with a mean incidence of 12-14% detected by echography or Doppler. No validated thromboprophylaxis has been identified, but pharmacological prophylaxis with vitamin K antagonists or low molecular weight heparins can reduce CRT incidence by 55%-60% without increasing major bleeding risk. This prophylaxis should be started before catheter insertion at prophylactic doses and continued thereafter at subtherapeutic doses.
Symptomatic catheter related thrombosis (CRT) occurs in 4%-8% of cancer patients. The mean incidence of CRT, detected either by echography or Doppler ranges between 12 and 14% with a high negative predictive value of about 95%, allowing the subsequent occurrence of CRT (symptomatic and asymptomatic) to be safely excluded. Despite its frequency and its medico-economic consequences, no thromboprophylaxis has been validated to date. In most patients, CRT occurs immediately after catheter insertion, most often within the first week and almost all within the first month after insertion. Meta analyses show a reduction of asymptomatic and symptomatic CRT incidence by about 55%-60% using either vitamin K antagonists or low molecular weight heparins without an increased risk of major bleeding. This pharmacological prophylaxis is only effective when started before the central venous catheter insertion at prophylactic doses and thereafter continued at subtherapeutic doses. Since no population at high risk of CRT has been identified, this review focuses on pathophysiology, epidemiology and clinical supportive data that could lead to a new CRT prophylaxis strategy.

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