1 / 8

Apixiban Dosing to Optimize Protection from Thrombosis

Mary Cushman, MD, MSc University of Vermont. Apixiban Dosing to Optimize Protection from Thrombosis. Prophylaxis in Medical Inpatients: What is the Problem?. Incidence rate (symptomatic): 1% ½ occur after discharge We don’t understand which patients are at highest risk.

benjamin
Download Presentation

Apixiban Dosing to Optimize Protection from Thrombosis

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Mary Cushman, MD, MSc University of Vermont Apixiban Dosing to Optimize Protection from Thrombosis

  2. Prophylaxis in Medical Inpatients: What is the Problem? • Incidence rate (symptomatic): 1% • ½ occur after discharge • We don’t understand which patients are at highest risk

  3. ACP Guidelines 2011 • Assess risk of thrombosis and bleeding • Prophylaxis in those at high thrombosis risk unless high bleeding risk • Decreases PE by 4 events per 1000 treated • Increases major bleeding by 1 per 1000 treated • No universal prophylaxis Qaseem A. Annals Intern Med 2011

  4. What is a High Risk Medical Patient? • Most existing scores developed empirically • None well validated Kucher, NEJM 2005; Barbar, JTH 2010; Spyropoulos, Chest, 2011 • Hospitalized patients ≠ general population • Older age, obesity: NO • Trauma, pneumonia, platelets, some cancers: YES Zakai NA, JTH 2004

  5. ADOPT Inclusion Criteria Hospitalized with: • CHF or Respiratory Failure • Infection, Acute Rheumatic Disorder or IBD + ≥ 1 of: • Age ≥ 75, prior VTE, BMI ≥30, estrogen therapy • Mobility restricted to walking in room

  6. ADOPT % with VTE 2.6-fold increased risk of major bleeding

  7. Drawbacks of Many Trials • Most rely on screen-detected DVT so serious VTE minimized • Treatment not extended after discharge • Risk extends 3 months • ½ of events after discharge • Follow up not long enough to detect VTE occurring after therapy

  8. Future Directions • Develop validated risk models to include only high risk patients in trials • Use treatment with lowest bleeding risk • Continue follow up after treatment • More study of post-discharge treatment

More Related