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Venous Thromboembolism. Justin A. Glass, MD Emory Family Medicine 7.3.08. Objectives. Clinical review of VTE History Prevalence Diagnosis Treatment Prevention . Venous Thromboembolism: DVT. Venous Thromboembolism : PE.
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Venous Thromboembolism Justin A. Glass, MD Emory Family Medicine 7.3.08
Objectives • Clinical review of VTE • History • Prevalence • Diagnosis • Treatment • Prevention
Venous Thromboembolism: PE • An autopsy on Derrick Thomas this morning showed that the nine-time Pro Bowl linebacker died of a blood clot in an artery between his heart and lungs. • Dr. Barth Green -- the neurosurgeon who along with Dr. Frank Eismont had operated on Thomas on Jan. 24 for a spinal cord injury that had left him paralyzed from the chest down – said “It was what is called a saddle embolus” NY Times, 2/10/2000
VTE Prevalence • 600,000 VTE’s in U.S. in 1991 (0.2% of the population) • Incidence is increasing • Why do we care? • 50% of untreated DVT’s will be complicated by a PE • 26% of unrecognized pulmonary embolisms are eventually fatal • 16% of all hospital deaths due to PE • The Worcester DVT Study. Arch Intern Med. 1991;151:933-938.
VTE: Pathogenesis • Virchow’s Triad • Venous stasis • Endothelial injury • Hypercoagulability Brotman DJ, Deitcher SR, Lip GY, Matzdorff AC. Virchow's triad revisited. South Med J. 2004;97:213-214.
VTE Risks • Increasing age • Cancer • Pregnancy • 60/100,000 women • Immobility • Surgery • Hormone replacement therapy / OCP’s • 10-30 / 100,000 users vs 4-8/100,000 non-users • Thrombophilic disorders
Maria • 38 yr old female presents with pain and mild swelling in L LE. Pt was hiking recently when she slipped, fell and injured R knee. Her knee immediately swelled. She felt unstable w/ walking due to pain and sought care at a local ER. A knee immobilizer was placed. She followed up with an orthopedic doctor who diagnosed an acute ACL rupture. An MRI confirmed this and she underwent allograph repair 3 weeks ago. She is currently doing rehab with a PT.
Maria (cont) • PMH: Negative • PSH: ACL repair (6/12/08) • Meds: Ibuprofen prn / Vicodin prn / Ortho Tricyclen • Allergies: NKDA • Soc Hx: Scrub tech at EUH No Tob / Rare Etoh
Maria on exam • Vitals: T 97.2 P 90 BP 110/70 R 14 • Pulm: CTA • CV: Regular • Ext: Moderate swelling about R knee w/ healing incision. 1+ pitting edema L LE. Mild pain with squeezing calf on L leg. None on R leg. Negative Homan’s sign. Calf circumference is 1 cm larger L than R.
DVT - Physical Exam Calf tenderness Homan’s Sign Differential Swelling www.netterimages.com
Diagnosis • Well’s Criteria (DVT) • Active cancer (tx within <6 mos or palliative care) (1) • Calf swelling (3 cm difference – 10 cm below tib tub) (1) • Collateral superficial veins (1) • Paralysis, paresis, or recent immobilization LE (1) • Pitting edema confined to involved leg (1) • Bedridden within 3 days or surgery w/ anes <12 wks (1) • Swollen leg (1) • Alternate diagnosis more likely (-2) Probability: Low (0 pts) Intermediate (1-2) High (3) Lancet 2002;350:1796.
D-Dimer • Clinical utility in VTE diagnosis?
D-Dimer • If D-Dimer is measured by ELISA or immunoturbidimetric method, it is highly sensitive for active VTE. • Most studies use cutoff <500 ng/mL • Sensitivity 96-100% • If D-Dimer is measured by semiquantitative latex agglutination, it is not highly sensitive.
D-Dimer • A low clinical probability by Well’s Criteria plus a normal D-Dimer implies a LOW clinical risk of VTE. • 0.5% of patients develop DVT in 3 months • Further testing can be deferred in this patient population. Fancher TL, White RH, Kravitz RL. Combined use of rapid D-dimer testing and estimation of clinical probability in the diagnosis of DVT: systematic review. BMJ. 2004;329:821 Ann Fam Med 2007;5:57-62.
D-Dimer • What is the risk of DVT in a patient with a normal D-Dimer and a moderate or high risk Well’s score? • Moderate: 3.5% • High risk: 21% Fancher TL, White RH, Kravitz RL. Combined use of rapid D-dimer testing and estimation of clinical probability in the diagnosis of DVT: systematic review. BMJ. 2004;329:821.
VTE Diagnosis: Ultrasonography • Duplex scan of LE • Compressibility of the vein • Doppler flow within the vein • Symptomatic patient with proximal LE DVT • Sensitivity: 89-96% • Specificity: 94-99%
VTE Diagnosis: Ultrasonography • Asymptomatic patient with proximal LE DVT • Sensitivity: 47-62% • Symptomatic patient with distal LE DVT • Sensitivity: 73-93%
VTE Diagnosis: Venography • Gold standard for DVT • Primarily a research tool now
Albert • 62 yr old male presents to the ER with complaint of pleuritic CP. Present x 1 day. No injury. Feels SOB with walking. No fever. No cough. No LE pain. • PMH: Colon CA s/p L colectomy 4/08 / HTN / BPH • Meds: Lisinopril / Tamsulosin / ASA / MVI • NKDA • Soc Hx: No Tob / No Etoh
Albert • Physical • T 99.1 P 110 BP 135/85 R 22 O2 sat 95% RA • Pulm: CTA good AF • CV: Regular No murmurs • Ext: No edema. Negative Homan’s sign
Albert • What is the likelihood of a PE?
Diagnosis of PE: Common findings • History • Dyspnea (73%) • Pleuritic Chest pain (66%) • Cough (37%) • Hemoptysis (13%) • Physical • Tachypnea (70%) • Rales (51%) • Tachycardia (30%) Stein, PD, et al. Chest 1991 Sep;100(3):598-603. Stein, PD, et al. Am J Cardiol 1991; 68:1723-
Diagnosis • Well’s Criteria (PE) • Cancer (1) • Hemoptysis (1) • Heart rate more than 100 (1.5) • Previous episode of VTE (1.5) • Recent surgery or immobilization (1.5) • Alternate diagnosis less likely than PE (3) • Clinical signs of DVT (3) Probability: Low (0-1) Intermediate (2-6) High (7+) Am J Med 2002;113:270.
Diagnosis of PE: Common findings • D-Dimer elevation • >500 ng/ml • A-a gradient >20 mm Hg • (713(FIO2) – PaCO2/0.8) – PaO2 • BNP or proBNP elevation • Sensitivity and Specificity are approx 60% • Troponin elevation • 30-50% of mod/large PE’s have troponin elevation
PE: Definitive Testing • What test should be ordered?
PE: Definitive Testing • VQ Scan • Spiral CT Chest • Pulmonary angiography
VQ Scan www.imagingpathways.health.wa.gov.au/.../vq.jpg
VQ Scanning • Nuclear medicine scan to detect perfusion-ventilation mismatch. • Indeterminate • Normal • Low probability • Intermediate probability • High probability
Likelihood of PE based on VQ Result Clinical Probability of PE VQ Scan Result High Intermediate Low High 95 86 56 Intermediate 66 28 15 Low 40 15 4 Normal 0 6 2 Value of the VQ scan in acute pulmonary embolism. Results of the prospective investigation of pulmonary embolism diagnosis (PIOPED). The PIOPED Investigators. JAMA 1990 May 23-30;263(20):2753-9.
Diagnosis of VTE: Spiral CT Chest • Detection of pulmonary embolism by timed application of contrast to the pulmonary vasculature • Heterogenity in results across trials. • Sensitivity: 40-100% (PIOPED 2: 83%) • Specificity: 78-100% (PIOPED 2: 96%) Segal J, Eng J, Tamariz L, Bass E. Review of the evidence on diagnosis of deep venous thrombosis and pulmonary embolism. Ann Fam Med. 2007;5:63-73.
Spiral CT www.imagingpathways.health.wa.gov.au/.../vq.jpg
Diagnosis of VTE: Spiral CT Chest • PIOPED 2 Study Clinical Probability of PE CT ResultLowIntermediateHigh Positive for PE 58% 92% 98% Negative for PE 4% 11% 40% Table show % with PE by “composite reference standard” N Engl J Med 2006;354:2317-27.
Diagnosis of VTE: Spiral CT Chest • PIOPED 2 Study Clinical Probability of PE CT ResultLowIntermediateHigh Positive for PE 58% 92% 98% Negative for PE 4% 11%40% Table show % with PE by “composite reference standard” N Engl J Med 2006;354:2317-27.
PE Diagnosis • VQ scanning versus Spiral CT Chest • Randomized trial of patients suspected of having PE, n=1471 False Negative Rate Spiral CT 0.6% VQ Scan 1.0%
VTE Diagnosis • What should you do if you have a patient with a high probability Well’s score for PE and a negative spiral CT Chest? • Single or sequential duplex scan of the LE OR • Pulmonary angiography
PE Diagnosis • Christopher Study (n=3306) • Well’s score obtained. Two cohorts defined • Well’s 4 or less (PE unlikely) • Well’s >4 (PE likely) • D-Dimer obtained if Well’s 4 or less • If Well’s 4 or less and D-Dimer negative, conclude - no PE • If Well’s 4 or less and D-Dimer positive, obtain Spiral CT • If Well’s >4, obtain Spiral CT JAMA. 2006;295:172-179
PE Diagnosis Christopher Study (cont) Initial WorkupFollow-up: 3 months Low Risk Well’s / Negative D-Dimer 0.5% with PE No Spiral CT done Negative Spiral CT 1.3% with PE Positive Spiral CT initially 3.0% with PE
Treatment of DVT • Low Molecular Weight Heparin (LMWH) • 1 mg/kg q 12 hrs or 1.5 mg/kg q 24 hrs • Coumadin x 3 months (Goal INR 2-3) • LMWH should be overlapped until both of the following conditions are met: • INR >2 x days • At least five days of LMWH given • Pressure stockings
Treatment of PE • Refer to DVT guidelines, with addition of: • Unfractionated heparin is considered equal option to LMWH. • Heparin dosing should be adjusted to achieve aPTT 1.5-2.5 x the upper limit of normal. • Strict guidelines need to be in place to prevent undercoagulation or overcoagulation
Unfractionated heparin • Weight based nomogram 1. Bolus 80 units/kg then continuous infusion at 18 units/kg. 2. Check aPTT 6 hrs aPTT <35 (<1.2 x control): Bolus 80 units/kg and increase infusion by 4 units/kg aPTT 35-45 (1.2 – 1.5 x control): Bolus 40 units/kg then increase by 2 units/kg/hr aPTT 46-70 (1.5-2.3 x control): No change aPTT 71-90 (2.3 – 3.0 x control): Decrease infusion by 2 units/kg/hr aPTT 90+ (>3.0 x control): Hold infusion x 1 hour, then decrease infusion by 3 units/kg/hr 3. Return to step #2 if dose change. 4. If no dose change, check aPTT q 24 hrs
Unfractioned Heparin vs LMWH • Meta-analyses have shown: • Lower recurrence DVT (2.7% vs 7.0%) • Lower incidence major bleeding (0.9% vs 3.2%) • Lower death rate at 3 months (OR 0.71 (0.53-0.94)) (All favoring LMWH) Am J Med 1996 Mar;100(3):269-77 Ann Intern Med 1999 May 18;130(10):800-9