Venous thromboembolism in metastatic pancreatic cancer

Author:

Laderman Lauren1ORCID,Sreekrishnanilayam Krishnalatha2,Pandey Ramesh K.3,Handorf Elizabeth2,Blumenreich Aryeh1,Sorice Kristen A.2,Lynch Shannon M.2,Cheema Khadija4,Nagappan Lavanya1,Sosa Iberia R.2,Dotan Efrat2,Vijayvergia Namrata2

Affiliation:

1. Lewis Katz School of Medicine at Temple University Philadelphia Pennsylvania 191440 USA

2. Fox Chase Cancer Center Philadelphia Pennsylvania 19111 USA

3. Baylor College of Medicine Houston Texas 77030 USA

4. Abington Memorial Hospital Abington Pennsylvania 19001 USA

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundPancreatic cancer (PC) carries a high risk of venous thromboembolism (VTE). Several risk assessment models (RAMs) predict benefit of thromboprophylaxis in solid tumors; however, none are verified in metastatic pancreatic cancer (mPC).MethodsA retrospective mPC cohort treated at an academic cancer center from 2010 to 2016 was investigated for VTE incidence (VTEmets). Multivariable regression analysis was used to assess multiple VTE risk factors. Overall survival (OS) was compared between mPC groups with and without VTE. Survival was analyzed using Kaplan–Meier survival plots and Cox proportional hazards regressions.Results400 mPC patients (median age 66; 52% males) were included. 87% had performance status of ECOG 0–1; 70% had advanced stage at PC diagnosis. Incidence of VTEmets was 17.5%; median time of occurrence 3.48 months after mPC diagnosis. Survival analysis started at median VTE occurrence. Median OS was 10.5 months in VTEmets vs. 13.4 in non‐VTE group. Only advanced stage (OR 3.7, p = .001) correlated with increased VTE risk.ConclusionsThe results suggest mPC carries a significant VTE burden. VTE predicts poor outcomes from the point of median VTE occurrence. Advanced stage disease is the strongest risk factor. Future studies are needed to define risk stratification, survival benefit, and choice of thromboprophylaxis.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Hematology,General Medicine

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