Anticoagulation in cancer-associated thromboembolism with thrombocytopenia: a prospective, multi-center cohort study

Department

Oncology and Hematology

Document Type

Article

Publication Title

Blood Advances

Abstract

Venous thromboembolism (VTE) with concurrent thrombocytopenia is frequently encountered in patients with cancer. Therapeutic anticoagulation in the setting of thrombocytopenia is associated with a high risk of hemorrhage. Retrospective analyses suggest the utility of modified-dose anticoagulation in this population. To assess the incidence of hemorrhage or thrombosis according to anticoagulation strategy, we performed a prospective, multi-center, observational study. Patients with active malignancy, acute VTE, and concurrent thrombocytopenia (platelet count < 100,000/µL) were enrolled. The cumulative incidences of hemorrhage or recurrent VTE were determined considering death as a competing risk. Primary outcomes were centrally adjudicated and comparisons made according to initial treatment with full-dose or modified-dose anticoagulation. A total of 121 patients were enrolled at six hospitals. Seventy-five patients were initially treated with full-dose anticoagulation (62%), 33 (27%) with modified-dose anticoagulation, while 13 (11%) received no anticoagulation. Most patients who received modified-dose anticoagulation had a hematologic malignancy (31 of 33, 94%) and an acute DVT (28 of 33, 85%). In patients who initially received full-dose anticoagulation, the cumulative incidence of major hemorrhage at 60 days was 12.8% (95% CI, 4.9-20.8%) and 6.6% (95% CI, 2.4-15.7%) in those who received modified-dose anticoagulation (Fine-Gray HR 2.18, 95% CI 1.21-3.93). The cumulative incidence of recurrent VTE at 60 days in patients who initially received full-dose anticoagulation was 5.6% (95% CI, 0.2-11%) and 0% in patients who received modified-dose anticoagulation. In conclusion, modified-dose anticoagulation appears to be a safe alternative to therapeutic anticoagulation in patients with cancer who develop DVT in the setting of thrombocytopenia.

DOI

10.1182/bloodadvances.2021005966

Publication Date

10-18-2021

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