A Clinical Outcome-Based Prospective Study on Venous Thromboembolism After Cancer Surgery

Giancarlo Agnelli(University of Perugia), Giorgio Bolis(University of Milan), Lorenzo Capussotti(Fondazione Piemontese per la Ricerca sul Cancro Onlus), Roberto Mario Scarpa(Ospedale San Luigi Gonzaga), Francesco Tonelli(University of Florence), Erminio Bonizzoni(University of Milan), Marco Moia(Ospedale Maggiore), Fabio Parazzini(Italfarmaco (Italy)), R Rossi(University of Perugia), Francesco Sonaglia(University of Perugia), Bettina Valarani(University of Perugia), C. Bianchini(Italfarmaco (Italy)), Gualberto Gussoni(University of Milan)
Annals of Surgery
December 21, 2005
Cited by 688Open Access
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Abstract

In Brief Summary Background Data: The epidemiology of venous thromboembolism (VTE) after cancer surgery is based on clinical trials on VTE prophylaxis that used venography to screen deep vein thrombosis (DVT). However, the clinical relevance of asymptomatic venography-detected DVT is unclear, and the population of these clinical trials is not necessarily representative of the overall cancer surgery population. Objective: The aim of this study was to evaluate the incidence of clinically overt VTE in a wide spectrum of consecutive patients undergoing surgery for cancer and to identify risk factors for VTE. Methods: @RISTOS was a prospective observational study in patients undergoing general, urologic, or gynecologic surgery. Patients were assessed for clinically overt VTE occurring up to 30 ± 5 days after surgery or more if the hospital stay was longer than 35 days. All outcome events were evaluated by an independent Adjudication Committee. Results: A total of 2373 patients were included in the study: 1238 (52%) undergoing general, 685 (29%) urologic, and 450 (19%) gynecologic surgery. In-hospital prophylaxis was given in 81.6% and postdischarge prophylaxis in 30.7% of the patients. Fifty patients (2.1%) were adjudicated as affected by clinically overt VTE (DVT, 0.42%; nonfatal pulmonary embolism, 0.88%; death 0.80%). The incidence of VTE was 2.83% in general surgery, 2.0% in gynecologic surgery, and 0.87% in urologic surgery. Forty percent of the events occurred later than 21 days from surgery. The overall death rate was 1.72%; in 46.3% of the cases, death was caused by VTE. In a multivariable analysis, 5 risk factors were identified: age above 60 years (2.63, 95% confidence interval, 1.21–5.71), previous VTE (5.98, 2.13–16.80), advanced cancer (2.68, 1.37–5.24), anesthesia lasting more than 2 hours (4.50, 1.06–19.04), and bed rest longer than 3 days (4.37, 2.45–7.78). Conclusions: VTE remains a common complication of cancer surgery, with a remarkable proportion of events occurring late after surgery. In patients undergoing cancer surgery, VTE is the most common cause of death at 30 days after surgery. In a prospective, observational study, the incidence of clinically overt venous thromboembolism (VTE) after cancer surgery, and the influence of possible risk factors were assessed. VTE remains a frequent complication of cancer surgery (overall incidence, 2.1%), and it is still the most common cause of postoperative death in these patients. Risk factors as age above 60 years, previous VTE, advanced staging, prolonged anesthesia, and bed rest were identified.


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