Clinical characteristics, management strategies and outcomes of patients with recurrent venous thromboembolism in the real world

Author:

Yamashita Yugo,Morimoto Takeshi,Kadota Kazushige,Takase Toru,Hiramori Seiichi,Kim Kitae,Oi Maki,Akao Masaharu,Kobayashi Yohei,Toyofuku Mamoru,Inoko Moriaki,Tada Tomohisa,Chen Po-Min,Murata Koichiro,Tsuyuki Yoshiaki,Nishimoto Yuji,Sakamoto Jiro,Togi Kiyonori,Mabuchi Hiroshi,Takabayashi Kensuke,Kato Takao,Ono Koh,Kimura Takeshi

Abstract

AbstractThere is a paucity of data on management strategies and clinical outcomes after recurrent venous thromboembolism (VTE). In a multicenter registry enrolling 3027 patients with acute symptomatic VTE, the current study population was divided into the following 3 groups: (1) First recurrent VTE during anticoagulation therapy (N = 110); (2) First recurrent VTE after discontinuation of anticoagulation therapy (N = 116); and (3) No recurrent VTE (N = 2801). Patients with first recurrent VTE during anticoagulation therapy more often had active cancer (45, 25 and 22%, P < 0.001). Among 110 patients with first recurrent VTE during anticoagulation therapy, 84 patients (76%) received warfarin at recurrent VTE with the median prothrombin time-international normalized ratio (PT-INR) value at recurrent VTE of 1.6, although patients with active cancer had a significantly higher median PT-INR value at recurrent VTE compared with those without active cancer (2.0 versus 1.4, P < 0.001). Within 90 days after recurrent VTE, 23 patients (20.9%) during anticoagulation therapy and 24 patients (20.7%) after discontinuation of anticoagulation therapy died. Active cancer was a major cause of recurrent VTE during anticoagulation therapy as a patient-related factor, while sub-optimal intensity of anticoagulation therapy was a major cause of recurrent VTE during anticoagulation therapy as a treatment-related factor, particularly in patients without active cancer.

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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