Low-Molecular-Weight Heparin versus a Coumarin for the Prevention of Recurrent Venous Thromboembolism in Patients with CancerAgnes Lee, Mark N. Levine, Ross Baker et al.|New England Journal of Medicine|2003 BACKGROUND: Patients with cancer have a substantial risk of recurrent thrombosis despite the use of oral anticoagulant therapy. We compared the efficacy of a low-molecular-weight heparin with that of an oral anticoagulant agent in preventing recurrent thrombosis in patients with cancer. METHODS: Patients with cancer who had acute, symptomatic proximal deep-vein thrombosis, pulmonary embolism, or both were randomly assigned to receive low-molecular-weight heparin (dalteparin) at a dose of 200 IU per kilogram of body weight subcutaneously once daily for five to seven days and a coumarin derivative for six months (target international normalized ratio, 2.5) or dalteparin alone for six months (200 IU per kilogram once daily for one month, followed by a daily dose of approximately 150 IU per kilogram for five months). RESULTS: During the six-month study period, 27 of 336 patients in the dalteparin group had recurrent venous thromboembolism, as compared with 53 of 336 patients in the oral-anticoagulant group (hazard ratio, 0.48; P=0.002). The probability of recurrent thromboembolism at six months was 17 percent in the oral-anticoagulant group and 9 percent in the dalteparin group. No significant difference between the dalteparin group and the oral-anticoagulant group was detected in the rate of major bleeding (6 percent and 4 percent, respectively) or any bleeding (14 percent and 19 percent, respectively). The mortality rate at six months was 39 percent in the dalteparin group and 41 percent in the oral-anticoagulant group. CONCLUSIONS: In patients with cancer and acute venous thromboembolism, dalteparin was more effective than an oral anticoagulant in reducing the risk of recurrent thromboembolism without increasing the risk of bleeding.
Warfarin in the Prevention of Stroke Associated with Nonrheumatic Atrial FibrillationMichael D. Ezekowitz, Samuel L. Bridgers, K James et al.|New England Journal of Medicine|1992 BACKGROUND: Nonrheumatic atrial fibrillation is common among the elderly and is associated with an increased risk of stroke. We investigated whether anticoagulation with warfarin would reduce this risk. METHODS: We conducted a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled study to evaluate low-intensity anticoagulation with warfarin (prothrombin-time ratio, 1.2 to 1.5) in 571 men with chronic nonrheumatic atrial fibrillation; 525 patients had not previously had a cerebral infarction, whereas 46 patients had previously had such an event. The primary end point was cerebral infarction; secondary end points were cerebral hemorrhage and death. RESULTS: Among the patients with no history of stroke, cerebral infarction occurred in 19 of the 265 patients in the placebo group during an average follow-up of 1.7 years (4.3 percent per year) and in 4 of the 260 patients in the warfarin group during an average follow-up of 1.8 years (0.9 percent per year). The reduction in risk with warfarin therapy was 0.79 (95 percent confidence interval, 0.52 to 0.90; P = 0.001). The annual event rate among the 228 patients over 70 years of age was 4.8 percent in the placebo group and 0.9 percent in the warfarin group (risk reduction, 0.79; P = 0.02). The only cerebral hemorrhage occurred in a 73-year-old patient in the warfarin group. Other major hemorrhages, all gastrointestinal, occurred in 10 patients: 4 in the placebo group, for a rate of 0.9 percent per year, and 6 in the warfarin group, for a rate of 1.3 percent per year. There were 37 deaths that were not preceded by a cerebral end point--22 in the placebo group and 15 in the warfarin group (risk reduction, 0.31; P = 0.19). Cerebral infarction was more common among patients with a history of cerebral infarction (9.3 percent per year in the placebo group and 6.1 percent per year in the warfarin group) than among those without such a history. CONCLUSIONS: Low-intensity anticoagulation with warfarin prevented cerebral infarction in patients with nonrheumatic atrial fibrillation without producing an excess risk of major hemorrhage. This benefit extended to patients over 70 years of age.
In situ detection of tissue factor in vascular endothelial cells: Correlation with the malignant phenotype of human breast diseaseRandomized Comparison of Low Molecular Weight Heparin and Coumarin Derivatives on the Survival of Patients With Cancer and Venous ThromboembolismAgnes Lee, Frederick R. Rickles, Jim A. Julian et al.|Journal of Clinical Oncology|2005 PURPOSE: Experimental studies and indirect clinical evidence suggest that low molecular weight heparins may have antineoplastic effects. We investigated the influence of a low molecular weight heparin dalteparin on the survival of patients with active cancer and acute venous thromboembolism. PATIENTS AND METHODS: Survival data were examined in a posthoc analysis in patients with solid tumors and venous thromboembolism who were randomly assigned to dalteparin or a coumarin derivative for 6 months in a multicenter, open-label, randomized, controlled trial. All-cause mortality at 12 months was compared between treatment groups in patients with and without metastatic malignancy. The effect of dalteparin on survival was compared between the two patient subgroups. RESULTS: During the 12-month follow-up period, 356 of 602 patients with solid tumors and acute venous thromboembolism died. Among patients without metastatic disease, the probability of death at 12 months was 20% in the dalteparin group, as compared with 36% in the oral anticoagulant group (hazard ratio, 0.50; 95% CI, 0.27 to 0.95; P = .03). In patients with metastatic cancer, no difference in mortality between the treatment groups was observed (72% and 69%, respectively; hazard ratio, 1.1; 95% CI, 0.87 to 1.4; P = .46). The observed effects of dalteparin on survival were statistically significantly different between patients with and without metastatic disease (P = .02). CONCLUSION: The use of dalteparin relative to coumarin derivatives was associated with improved survival in patients with solid tumors who did not have metastatic disease at the time of an acute venous thromboembolic event. Additional studies are warranted to investigate these findings.
Quantitative Assay of a Plasma Factor Deficient in von Willebrand's Disease that is Necessary for Platelet Aggregation. RELATIONSHIP TO FACTOR VIII PROCOAGULANT ACTIVITY AND ANTIGEN CONTENTHarvey J. Weiss, Leon W. Hoyer, Frederick R. Rickles et al.|Journal of Clinical Investigation|1973 In a previous paper, we showed that the abnormality of ristocetin-induced platelet aggregation in platelet-rich plasma in 10 patients with von Willebrand's disease could be corrected by a factor in normal plasma that was present in the same fractions as factor VIII procoagulant activity (antihemophilic factor, AHF, VIII(AHF)) when prepared by chromatography on Bio-Gel 5 M (Bio-Rad Laboratories, Richmond, Calif.). This observation suggests that patients with this disorder are deficient in a plasma factor, associated with the factor VIII molecule, that is necessary for normal platelet function. In the present paper, we describe, an assay for this factor, the von Willebrand factor (VIII(VWF)), based on the observation that a log-log relationship exists between the amount of ristocetin-induced aggregation of washed, normal platelets and the concentration of normal plasma present in the test system. We assayed the activity of VIII(VWF) as well as antihemophilic factor procoagulant activity (VIII(AHF)) and factor VIII antigen (VIII(AGN)) in 15 patients with von Willebrand's disease and 20 normal subjects. A highly significant correlation (r approximately 0.80) between VIII(VWF) and both VIII(AHF) was found in normal subjects and in patients with von Willebrand's disease. This finding, in addition to the observation that agarose gel chromatography fractions that have VIII(AHF) procoagulant activity also have VIII(VWF) activity, strongly suggests that the von Willebrand factor is associated with the factor VIII molecule. VIII(VWF) in normal plasma was not inhibited by human anti-VIII, and VIII(VWF) levels were normal in hemophilic plasma. Thus, the VIII(VWF) site on the factor VIII molecule appears to be different from that determining VIII(AHF). Finally, the activity of VIII(VWF) appeared to correlate better with the bleeding time than either VIII(AHF) or VIII(AGN). This suggests that VIII(VWF) assayed in this study may be the "anti-bleeding factor" that is deficient in von Willebrand's disease. These findings are consistent with a decreased synthesis of the factor VIII molecule in von Willebrand's disease and suggest the possibility of additional abnormalities of the site on the molecule that determines the activity of VIII(VWF).