Thrombosis
Appearance
Thrombophilia
[edit | edit source]- Present in about 5% of the population, but most never get VTE
HERITABLE thrombophilia screen:
[edit | edit source]- Factor V Leiden
- Prothrombin gene mutation
- Protein S
- Protein C
- Anti-thrombin
- (Protein S, C and anti-thrombin levels are impacted by acute thrombosis so might need to check it again later)
ACQUIRED thrombophilia
[edit | edit source]- Anti-phospholipid antibodies (lupus anticoagulant, anti-cardiolipin antibody and anti-B2 glycoprotein I antibody)
- Test if VTE is unprovoked or in an unusual site
- Patient has a concomitant autoimmune disorder, previous arterial thromboses including CVA/MI, or a history of recurrent pregnancy failure or fetal death
- Testing for lupus anticoagulant can be affected by DOAC (false positive)
- Underlying myeloproliferative disease
- Suspect with splanchnic vein thromboses or VTE in another unusual site
- Can be present despite normal blood counts
- Test is JAK2 kinase
- Consider CALR mutation testing and a BM biopsy if JAK2 is negative in patients with a high index of suspicion
- Consideration of malignancy
- 10% of those with unprovoked VTE will be diagnosed with cancer in the first year
- Medical history
- Examination
- FBE, calcium, LFts
- CXR
- Mammogram
- Pap smear
- PSA
- NBCSP
- Routine CT and tumour markers is not recommended, according to the Austin guidelines, but can be done depending on risk and clinical scenario
- Hyperhomocysteinaemia - testing not recommended routinely
- Anti-phospholipid antibodies (lupus anticoagulant, anti-cardiolipin antibody and anti-B2 glycoprotein I antibody)
Anticoagulants in thrombosis
[edit | edit source]- DOAC - 3/12 is shortest acceptable treatment for provoked DVT
- Apixaban 10mg BD for one week then 5mg BD
- Rivaroxaban 15mg BD for 3 weeks then 20mg daily
- Warfarin preferred if: (starting dose 5mg daily in most patients)
- Weight 120kg or BMI >40
- Weight less than 40kg
- APLS
- Mechanical heart valve
- Any contraindication to DOAC, including eGFR <30
- Warfarin starting dose 5mg daily in most patients. Need to bridge while loading for patients with VTE, until INR >2 for 2 consecutive days
- Enoxaparin - primarily for cancer-related thrombosis, pregnancy and superficial vein thrombosis. 1mg/kg BD or 1.5mg/kg daily.
- Check enoxaparin anti-Xa levels in patients with renal failure, extremes of weight, suspected non-compliance or overdose. Therapeutic level (peak, 4 hours post dose) is 0.5-1.0 units/mL if on a twice daily regimen.
- Unfractionated heparin
- Primarily used when rapid onset and offset is desired
- Plasma heparin anti-Xa level can be used to guide dosing in some patients:
- Failure to achieve an APTT result within the therapeutic range after 24 hours
- Heparin resistance (i.e., requirement of >35,000 units of UFH per 24 hours to achieve an APTT result within therapeutic range)
- Lupus anticoagulant (prolongs baseline APTT)
- >100kg
- Pregnant
- Need to achieve therapeutic range rapidly
- Markedly raised acute phase reactants
VTE Prophylaxis
[edit | edit source]The only surgical patients that don't get chemoprophylaxis (assuming no contraindication) are those with surgery <30 mins and NO risk factors
Risk factors
- Acquired
- Previous VTE
- Malignancy
- Surgery
- Trauma
- Immobilisation
- Age >65
- Pregnancy
- Chronic inflammatory bowel and liver disease
- Cardiovascular disease
- Drugs - hormonal, cancer therapy
- Antiphospholipid antibodies
- Kidney disease
- Haematologic conditions
- Inherited
- Thromobophilia
- Anatomic
- Varicose veins
- Paget-Schroetter syndrome
- May-Thurner syndrome
- IVC abnormalities