12 results on '"Lidwine Tick"'
Search Results
2. Age and sex associate with outcome in older AML and high risk MDS patients treated with 10-day decitabine
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Jacobien R. Hilberink, Isabelle A. van Zeventer, Dana A. Chitu, Thomas Pabst, Saskia K. Klein, Georg Stussi, Laimonas Griskevicius, Peter J. M. Valk, Jacqueline Cloos, Arjan A. van de Loosdrecht, Dimitri Breems, Danielle van Lammeren-Venema, Rinske Boersma, Mojca Jongen-Lavrencic, Martin Fehr, Mels Hoogendoorn, Markus G. Manz, Maaike Söhne, Rien van Marwijk Kooy, Dries Deeren, Marjolein W. M. van der Poel, Marie Cecile Legdeur, Lidwine Tick, Yves Chalandon, Emanuele Ammatuna, Sabine Blum, Bob Löwenberg, Gert J. Ossenkoppele, Dutch-Belgian Hemato-Oncology Cooperative Group (HOVON), Swiss Group for Clinical Cancer Research (SAKK), and Gerwin Huls
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Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Abstract
Abstract Treatment choice according to the individual conditions remains challenging, particularly in older patients with acute myeloid leukemia (AML) and high risk myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS). The impact of performance status, comorbidities, and physical functioning on survival is not well defined for patients treated with hypomethylating agents. Here we describe the impact of performance status (14% ECOG performance status 2), comorbidity (40% HCT-comorbidity index ≥ 2), and physical functioning (41% short physical performance battery 76 years was significantly associated with reduced OS (HR 1.58; p = 0.043) and female sex was associated with superior OS (HR 0.62; p = 0.06). We further compared the genetic profiles of these subgroups. This revealed comparable mutational profiles in patients younger and older than 76 years, but, interestingly, revealed significantly more prevalent mutated ASXL1, STAG2, and U2AF1 in male compared to female patients. In this cohort of older patients treated with decitabine age and sex, but not comorbidities, physical functioning or cytogenetic risk were associated with overall survival.
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- 2023
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3. P619: TRACKING DISEASE PARAMETERS BY MRD, CT AND PET IN FIRST LINE CLL PATIENTS TREATED WITH FIXED DURATION IBRUTINIB-VENETOCLAX; INTERIM ANALYSIS OF THE FIRST 30 PATIENTS IN HOVON 158/NEXT STEP TRIAL.
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Sabina Kersting, Mark-David Levin, Julie Dubois, Yvette van Norden, Johan Dobber, Yvonne Jauw, Anne-Marie van der Kevie-Kersemaekers, Clemens Mellink, Caspar Da Cunha-Bang, Leonie Van Desr Burg, Doreen Te Raa, Fransien de Boer, Jolanda Droogendijk, Cecile Idink, Koen De Heer, Marten Nijziel, Lidwine Tick, Inge Ludwig, Mathijs Silbermann, Aart Beeker, Mar Bellido, Ludo Evers, Gerben Zwezerijnen, Josée Zijlstra, Marcel Kap, Carsten Niemann, and Arnon Kater
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Diseases of the blood and blood-forming organs ,RC633-647.5 - Published
- 2023
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4. Web-Based Return of Individual Patient-Reported Outcome Results Among Patients With Lymphoma: Randomized Controlled Trial
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Simone Oerlemans, Lindy Paulina Johanna Arts, Jacobien M Kieffer, Judith Prins, Mels Hoogendoorn, Marjolein van der Poel, Ad Koster, Chantal Lensen, Wendy Bernadina Catharina Stevens, Djamila Issa, Johannes F M Pruijt, Margriet Oosterveld, René van der Griend, Marten Nijziel, Lidwine Tick, Eduardus F M Posthuma, and Lonneke V van de Poll-Franse
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Computer applications to medicine. Medical informatics ,R858-859.7 ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
BackgroundThere has been a cultural shift toward patient engagement in health, with a growing demand from patients to access their results. ObjectiveThe Lymphoma Intervention (LIVE) trial is conducted to examine the impact of return of individual patient-reported outcome (PRO) results and a web-based self-management intervention on psychological distress, self-management, satisfaction with information, and health care use in a population-based setting. MethodsReturn of PRO results included comparison with age- and sex-matched peers and was built into the Patient-Reported Outcomes Following Initial Treatment and Long-Term Evaluation of Survivorship registry. The self-management intervention is an adaptation of a fully automated evidence-based intervention for breast cancer survivors. Patients with lymphoma who completed the web-based questionnaire were equally randomized to care as usual, return of PRO results, and return of PRO results plus self-management intervention. Patients completed questionnaires 9 to 18 months after diagnosis (T0; n=227), 4 months (T1; n=190), 12 months (T2; n=170), and 24 months (T3; n=98). ResultsOf all invited patients, 51.1% (456/892) responded and web-based participants (n=227) were randomly assigned to care as usual (n=76), return of PRO results (n=74), or return of PRO results and access to Living with lymphoma (n=77). Return of PRO results was viewed by 76.7% (115/150) of those with access. No statistically significant differences were observed for psychological distress, self-management, satisfaction with information provision, and health care use between patients who received PRO results and those who did not (P>.05). Use of the self-management intervention was low (2/76, 3%), and an effect could therefore not be determined. ConclusionsReturn of individual PRO results seems to meet patients’ wishes but had no beneficial effects on patient outcome. No negative effects were found when individual PRO results were disclosed, and the return of individual PRO results can therefore be safely implemented in daily clinical practice. Trial RegistrationNetherlands Trial Register NTR5953; https://www.trialregister.nl/trial/5790 International Registered Report Identifier (IRRID)RR2-10.1186/s13063-017-1943-2
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- 2021
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5. Lymphoma InterVEntion (LIVE) – patient-reported outcome feedback and a web-based self-management intervention for patients with lymphoma: study protocol for a randomised controlled trial
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Lindy P. J. Arts, Lonneke V. van de Poll-Franse, Sanne W. van den Berg, Judith B. Prins, Olga Husson, Floortje Mols, Angelique V. M. Brands-Nijenhuis, Lidwine Tick, and Simone Oerlemans
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Lymphoma ,Intervention ,Self-management ,Psychological distress ,Information provision ,Patient-reported outcomes ,Medicine (General) ,R5-920 - Abstract
Abstract Background Patients with lymphoma are at risk of experiencing adverse physical and psychosocial problems from their cancer and its treatment. Regular screening of these symptoms by the use of patient-reported outcomes (PROs) could increase timely recognition and adequate symptom management. Moreover, self-management interventions intend to enhance knowledge and skills and empower patients to better manage their disease and related problems. The objective of the Lymphoma InterVEntion (LIVE) trial is to examine whether feedback to patients on their PROs and access to a web-based, self-management intervention named Living with lymphoma will increase self-management skills and satisfaction with information, and reduce psychological distress. Methods/design The LIVE randomised controlled trial consists of three arms: (1) standard care, (2) PRO feedback, and (3) PRO feedback and the Living with lymphoma intervention. Patients who have been diagnosed with Hodgkin lymphoma, non-Hodgkin lymphoma, including chronic lymphocytic leukaemia, as registered in the Netherlands Cancer Registry in various hospitals will be selected for participation. Patients are invited via their haemato-oncologist 6 to 15 months after diagnosis. The PRO feedback includes a graphical overview of patients’ own symptom and functioning scores and an option to compare their scores with those of other patients with lymphoma and a normative population of the same age and sex. The Living with lymphoma intervention is based on cognitive behavioural therapy components and includes information, assignments, assessments, and videos. Changes in outcomes from baseline to 16 weeks, 12, and 24 months post intervention will be measured. Primary outcomes are self-management skills, satisfaction with information, and psychological distress. Secondary outcomes are health-related quality of life, illness perceptions, fatigue, and health care use. Discussion/design The results of the LIVE trial will provide novel insights into whether access to PRO feedback and the Living with lymphoma intervention will be effective in increasing self-management skills and satisfaction with information, and reducing distress. The LIVE trial is embedded in a population-based registry, which provides a unique setting to ascertain information on response, uptake, and characteristics of patients with lymphoma in web-based intervention(s). When effective, PRO feedback and Living with lymphoma could serve as easily and widely accessible interventions for coping with lymphoma. Trial registration Netherlands Trial Register, identifier NTR5953 . Registered on 14 July 2016.
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- 2017
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6. 36-month clinical outcomes of patients with venous thromboembolism
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Alexander G.G. Turpie, Alfredo E. Farjat, Sylvia Haas, Walter Ageno, Jeffrey I. Weitz, Samuel Z. Goldhaber, Shinya Goto, Pantep Angchaisuksiri, Gloria Kayani, Renato D. Lopes, Chern-En Chiang, Harry Gibbs, Eric Tse, Peter Verhamme, Hugo ten Cate, Juan Muntaner, Sebastian Schellong, Henri Bounameaux, Paolo Prandoni, Uma Maheshwari, Ajay K. Kakkar, Ab Loualidi, Abdurrahim Colak, Abraham Bezuidenhout, Abu Abdool-Carrim, Addala Azeddine, Adriaan Beyers, Adriaan Dees, Ahmed Mohamed, Ahmet Aksoy, Akihiko Abiko, Akinori Watanabe, Alan Krichell, Alberto Alfredo Fernandez, Alberto Tosetto, Alexey Khotuntsov, Alisha Oropallo, Alison Slocombe, Allan Kelly, Amanda Clark, Amr Gad, Amy Arouni, Andor Schmidt, Andrea Berni, Andres Javier Kleiban, Andrew Machowski, Andrey Kazakov, Angel Galvez, Ann Lockman, Anna Falanga, Anoop Chauhan, Antoni Riera-Mestre, Antonino Mazzone, Armando D'Angelo, Artur Herdy, Atsushi Kato, Ayman Abd Elhamid Ebrahim Mahmoud Salem, Azlan Husin, Barbara Erdelyi, Barry Jacobson, Beatrice Amann-Vesti, Bektas Battaloglu, Benedicte Wilson, Benilde Cosmi, Bergmann Jean Francois, Berremeli Toufek, Beverley Hunt, Bhavesh Natha, Bisher Mustafa, Bonnie Chi Shan Kho, Boulon Carine, Brian Zidel, Brisot Dominique, Brousse Christophe, Bruno Trimarco, Canhua Luo, Carlos Alberto Cuneo, Carlos Jerjes Sanchez Diaz, Carsten Schwencke, Cas Cader, Celal Yavuz, Cesar Javier Zaidman, Charles Lunn, Chau-Chung Wu, Cheng Hock Toh, Chevrier Elisa, Chien-Hsun Hsia, Chien-Lung Huang, Chi-Hang Kevin Kwok, Chih-Cheng Wu, Chi-Hung Huang, Chris Ward, Christian Opitz, Christina Jeanneret-Gris, Chung Yin Ha, Chun-Yao Huang, Claude Luyeye Bidi, Clifford Smith, Cornelia Brauer, Corrado Lodigiani, Couturaud Francis, Cynthia Wu, Daniel Staub, Daniel Theodoro, Daniela Poli, David - Riesco Acevedo, David Adler, David Jimenez, David Keeling, David Scott, Davide Imberti, Desmond Creagh, Desmurs-Clavel Helene, Dirk Hagemann, Dirk Le Roux, Dirk Skowasch, Dmitry Belenky, Dmitry Dorokhov, Dmitry Petrov, Dmitry Zateyshchikov, Domenico Prisco, Dorthe Møller, Dusan Kucera, Ehab M. Esheiba, Elizaveta Panchenko, Elkouri Dominique, Emre Dogan, Emre Kubat, Enrique Diaz Diaz, Eric Wai Choi Tse, Erik Yeo, Erman Hashas, Ernst Grochenig, Eros Tiraferri, Erwin Blessing, Escande Orthlieb Michèle, Esther Usandizaga, Ettore Porreca, Fabian Ferroni, Falvo Nicolas, Félix Ayala-Paredes, Firas Koura, Fitjerald Henry, Franco Cosmi, Frans Erdkamp, Gadel Kamalov, Garcia-Bragado Dalmau, Garrigues Damien, Garry Klein, Gaurand Shah, Geert Hollanders, Geno Merli, Georg Plassmann, George Platt, Germain Poirier, German Sokurenko, Ghassan Haddad, Gholam Ali, Giancarlo Agnelli, Gin Gin Gan, Grace Kaye-Eddie, Gregoire Le Gal, Gregory Allen, Guillermo Antonio Llamas Esperón, Guillot Jean-Paul, Hagen Gerofke, Hallah Elali, Hana Burianova, Hans-Juergen Ohler, Haofu Wang, Harald Darius, Harinder S. Gogia, Harry Striekwold, Hatice Hasanoglu, Hatice Turker, Hendrik Franow, Herbert De Raedt, Herman Schroe, Hesham Salah ElDin, Hesham Zidan, Hiroaki Nakamura, Ho Young Kim, Holger Lawall, Hong Zhu, Hongyan Tian, Ho-Young Yhim, Hun Gyu Hwang, Hyeok Shim, Igor Kim, Igor Libov, Igor Sonkin, Igor Suchkov, Ik-Chan Song, Ilker Kiris, Ilya Staroverov, Irene Looi, Isabel M. De La Azuela Tenorio, Ismail Savas, Ivan Gordeev, Ivo Podpera, Jae Hoon Lee, Jameela Sathar, James Welker, Jan Beyer-Westendorf, Jan Kvasnicka, Jan Vanwelden, JangYong Kim, Jaromira Svobodova, Jaspal Gujral, Javier Marino, Javier Tristan Galvar, Jeannine Kassis, Jen-Yuan Kuo, Jhih-Yuan Shih, JiHyun Kwon, Jin Hyun Joh, Jin Hyun Park, Jin Seok Kim, Jinghua Yang, Jiri Krupicka, Jiri Lastuvka, Jiri Pumprla, Jiri Vesely, Joan Carlos Souto, João Antônio Correa, Johan Duchateau, John Perry Fletcher, Jorge del Toro, Jorge Guillermo Chavez Paez, Jørn Nielsen, Jose Dalmo Araujo Filho, Jose Saraiva, Jose Antonio Diaz Peromingo, Jose Gomez Lara, Jose Luis Fedele, Jose Maria Surinach, Joseph Chacko, Juan Antonio Muntaner, Juan Carlos Álvarez Benitez, Juan Moreno Hoyos Abril, Julian Humphrey, Julio Bono, Junji Kanda, Juree Boondumrongsagoon, Kai Hang Yiu, Kanchana Chansung, Karin Boomars, Kate Burbury, Katsuhiro Kondo, Kemal Karaarslan, Kensuke Takeuchi, Knut Kroeger, Konstantin Zrazhevskiy, Koscál Svatopluk, Kou-Gi Shyu, Kristel Vandenbosch, Kuan-Cheng Chang, Kuan-Ming Chiu, Kubina Jean-Manuel, Kwan Jing Wern, Kwo-Chang Ueng, Lalita Norasetthada, Laure Binet, Lee Ping Chew, Lei Zhang, Leone Maria Cristina, Lidwine Tick, Lilia Beatriz Schiavi, Lily Lee Lee Wong, Lohana Borges, Louis Botha, Luc Capiau, Luc Timmermans, Luciano Eduardo López, Luigi Ria, Luis Manuel Hernandez Blasco, Luis Alberto Guzman, Luis Flota Cervera, Mahe Isabelle, Manuel Monreal Bosch, Manuel de los Rios Ibarra, Manuel Núñez Fernandez, Marc Carrier, Marcelo Raul Barrionuevo, Marco Antonio Alcocer Gamba, Marco Cattaneo, Marco Moia, Margaret Bowers, Mariam Chetanachan, Mario Alberto Berli, Mark Fixley, Markus Faghih, Markus Stuecker, Marlin Schul, Martin Banyai, Martin Koretzky, Martin Myriam, Mary Elizabeth Gaffney, Masao Hirano, Masashi Kanemoto, Mashio Nakamura, Mersel Tahar, Messas Emmanuel, Michael Kovacs, Michael Leahy, Michael Levy, Michael Munch, Michael Olsen, Michel De Pauw, Michel Gustin, Michiel Van Betsbrugge, Mikhail Boyarkin, Miroslav Homza, Modise Koto, Mohamed Abdool-Gaffar, Mohamed Ayman Fakhry Nagib, Mohamed El-Dessoki, Mohamed Khan, Monniaty Mohamed, Moo Hyun Kim, Moon-Hee Lee, Mosaad Soliman, Mostafa Shawky Ahmed, Mostafa Soliman Abd el Bary, Moustafa A. Moustafa, Muhammad Hameed, Muhip Kanko, Mujibur Majumder, Nadezhda Zubareva, Nicola Mumoli, Nik Azim Nik Abdullah, Nisa Makruasi, Nishen Paruk, Nonglak Kanitsap, Norberto Duda, Nordiana Nordin, Ole Nyvad, Olga Barbarash, Orcun Gurbuz, Oscar Gomez Vilamajo, Oscar Nandayapa Flores, Ozcan Gur, Oztekin Oto, Pablo Javier Marchena, Patrick Carroll, Pavel Lang, Peter MacCallum, Peter Baron von Bilderling, Peter Blombery, Petr Jansky, Peuch Bernadette, Philippe De Vleeschauwer, Philippe Hainaut, Piera Maria Ferrini, Piriyaporn Iamsai, Ponchaux Christian, Pongtep Viboonjuntra, Ponlapat Rojnuckarin, Prahlad Ho, Pramook Mutirangura, Rachel Wells, Rafael Martinez, Raimundo Tirado Miranda, Ralf Kroening, Rapule Ratsela, Raquel Lopez Reyes, Raul Franco Diaz de Leon, Raymond Siu Ming Wong, Raz Alikhan, Reinhold Jerwan-Keim, Remedios Otero, Renate Murena-Schmidt, Reto Canevascini, Richard Ferkl, Richard White, Rika Van Herreweghe, Rita Santoro, Robert Klamroth, Robert Mendes, Robert Prosecky, Roberto Cappelli, Rudolf Spacek, Rupesh Singh, Sam Griffin, Sang Hoon Na, Sanjeev Chunilal, Saskia Middeldorp, Satoshi Nakazawa, See Guan Toh, Seinturier Christophe, Selim Isbir, Selma Raymundo, Seng Kiat Ting, Serge Motte, Serir Ozkan Aktogu, Servaas Donders, Seung Ick Cha, Seung-Hyun Nam, Sevestre-Pietri Marie-Antoinette, Shaun Maasdorp, Shenghua Sun, Shenming Wang, Sherif Mohamed Essameldin, Sherif Mohamed Sholkamy, Shintaro Kuki, Shuichi Yoshida, Shunzo Matsuoka, Simon McRae, Simon Watt, Siriwimon Patanasing, Siwe-Nana Jean-Léopold, Somchai Wongkhantee, Soo-Mee Bang, Sophie Testa, Stanislav Zemek, Steffen Behrens, Stephan Dominique, Stuart Mellor, Suaran Singh Gurcharan Singh, Sudip Datta, Sunee Chayangsu, Susan Solymoss, Tamara Everington, Tarek Ahmed Adel Abdel-Azim, Tawatchai Suwanban, Taylan Adademir, Terence Hart, Terriat Béatrice, Thifhelimbilu Luvhengo, Thomas Horacek, Thomas Zeller, Tim Boussy, Tim Reynolds, Tina Biss, Ting-Hsing Chao, Tomas Smith Casabella, Tomoya Onodera, Tontanai Numbenjapon, Victor Gerdes, Vladimir Cech, Vladimir Krasavin, Vladimir Tolstikhin, W.A. Bax, Wagih Fawzy Abdel Malek, Wai Khoon Ho, Walter Pharr, Weihong Jiang, Wei-Hsiang Lin, Weihua Zhang, Wei-Kung Tseng, Wen-Ter Lai, Wilfried De Backer, Wilhelm Haverkamp, Winston Yoshida, Wolfgang Korte, Won Il Choi, Yang-Ki Kim, Yasuhiro Tanabe, Yasushi Ohnuma, Yeung-Chul Mun, Yohan Balthazar, Yong Park, Yoshisato Shibata, Yuriy Burov, Yuriy Subbotin, Zdenek Coufal, Zhenwen Yang, Zhicheng Jing, Zhongqi Yang, Pulmonary Medicine, Clinical Genetics, Internal Medicine, Vascular Medicine, ACS - Pulmonary hypertension & thrombosis, ARD - Amsterdam Reproduction and Development, ACS - Diabetes & metabolism, VU University medical center, Interne Geneeskunde, MUMC+: MA Alg Interne Geneeskunde (9), and RS: Carim - B04 Clinical thrombosis and Haemostasis
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History ,Anticoagulation ,Registry ,Polymers and Plastics ,SDG 3 - Good Health and Well-being ,Deep vein thrombosis ,Pulmonary embolism ,Hematology ,Business and International Management ,Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering ,Venous thromboembolism - Abstract
BACKGROUND: Venous thromboembolism (VTE), encompassing both deep vein thrombosis (DVT) and pulmonary embolism (PE), is a leading cause of morbidity and mortality worldwide. METHODS: GARFIELD-VTE is a prospective, non-interventional observational study of real-world treatment practices. We aimed to capture the 36-month clinical outcomes of 10,679 patients with objectively confirmed VTE enrolled between May 2014 and January 2017 from 415 sites in 28 countries. FINDINGS: A total of 6582 (61.6 %) patients had DVT alone, 4097 (38.4 %) had PE ± DVT. At baseline, 98.1 % of patients received anticoagulation (AC) with or without other modalities of therapy. The proportion of patients on AC therapy decreased over time: 87.6 % at 3 months, 73.0 % at 6 months, 54.2 % at 12 months and 42.0 % at 36 months. At 12-months follow-up, the incidences (95 % confidence interval [CI]) of all-cause mortality, recurrent VTE and major bleeding were 6.5 (7.0-8.1), 5.4 (4.9-5.9) and 2.7 (2.4-3.0) per 100 person-years, respectively. At 36-months, these decreased to 4.4 (4.2-4.7), 3.5 (3.2-2.7) and 1.4 (1.3-1.6) per 100 person-years, respectively. Over 36-months, the rate of all-cause mortality and major bleeds were highest in patients treated with parenteral therapy (PAR) versus oral anti-coagulants (OAC) and no OAC, and the rate of recurrent VTE was highest in patients on no OAC versus those on PAR and OAC. The most frequent cause of death after 36-month follow-up was cancer (n = 565, 48.6 %), followed by cardiac (n = 94, 8.1 %), and VTE (n = 38, 3.2 %). Most recurrent VTE events were DVT alone (n = 564, 63.3 %), with the remainder PE, (n = 236, 27.3 %), or PE in combination with DVT (n = 63, 7.3 %). INTERPRETATION: GARFIELD-VTE provides a global perspective of anticoagulation patterns and highlights the accumulation of events within the first 12 months after diagnosis. These findings may help identify treatment gaps for subsequent interventions to improve patient outcomes in this patient population. ispartof: THROMBOSIS RESEARCH vol:222 pages:31-39 ispartof: location:United States status: published
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- 2023
7. Improving Outcome‑Driven Care in Multiple Myeloma Using Patient‑Reported Outcomes: A Qualitative Evaluation Study
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Christine Bennink, Marleen de Mul, Marjolein van der Klift, Annemiek Broijl, Lidwine Tick, Eva de Jongh, Mirjam Garvelink, Dorien Lobbezoo, Pieter Sonneveld, Jan Hazelzet, Hematology, Health Services Management & Organisation (HSMO), Erasmus MC other, Public Health, RS: GROW - R3 - Innovative Cancer Diagnostics & Therapy, and MUMC+: MA Medische Oncologie (9)
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COST-EFFECTIVENESS ,HEALTH-CARE ,OF-LIFE ,SURVIVORSHIP CARE ,MULTICENTER ,General Medicine - Abstract
Background and Objective: Multiple myeloma is an incurable disease with a considerable illness and treatment burden, which negatively impacts patients’ quality of life. This study aimed to evaluate the implementation of multiple myeloma care in five Dutch hospitals, related to the three objectives of outcome-driven care, which are defined as (1) providing information for shared decision making in individual patient care, (2) supporting the learning capacity of healthcare professionals and healthcare institutions through benchmarking and (3) developing outcome-driven and patient-centred contracting by health insurers. Methods: In this qualitative study, semi-structured interviews about experiences with patient-reported outcomes were conducted with patients, healthcare professionals and other stakeholders 2 years after implementation. Data were thematically analysed, and emerging topics were clustered around the three objectives of outcome-driven care. Results: A total of 46 interviews were held (15 with patients, 16 with professionals and 15 with other stakeholders) that showed patients with multiple myeloma were willing to complete patient-reported outcomes, although integration of patient-reported outcomes in shared decision making fell short in clinical practice. Aggregated patient-reported outcomes were considered important for improving quality of care; however, data collection and data exchange are hindered by privacy legislation, limitations of IT systems and a lack of data standards. Patient-reported outcomes were expected to contribute to cost-effective multiple myeloma treatment, yet outcome-driven reimbursement is still lacking. Conclusions: Outcome-driven multiple myeloma care using patient-reported outcomes is feasible, provided that (1) patient-reported outcomes and shared decision making are integrated into clinical practice, (2) legal and technical obstacles hindering data collection are removed and (3) health insurers adjust their reimbursement plans to facilitate outcome-driven care.
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- 2023
8. Addition of the nuclear export inhibitor selinexor to standard intensive treatment for elderly patients with AML and high risk MDS
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Jeroen Janssen, Bob Löwenberg, Markus Manz, Bart Biemond, Peter Westerweel, Saskia Klein, Martin Fehr, Harm Sinnige, Anna Efthymiou, M Legdeur, Thomas Pabst, Michael Gregor, Marjolein van der Poel, Dries Deeren, Lidwine Tick, Mojca Jongen-Lavrencic, Florence Obbergh, Rinske Boersma, Okke de Weerdt, Yves Chalandon, Dominik Heim, Olivier spertini, Geerte van Sluis, Carlos Graux, Georg. Stuessi, Yvette van Norden, and Gert Ossenkoppele
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Treatment results of AML in elderly patients are unsatisfactory. In an open label randomized phase II study, we investigated whether addition of the XPO1 inhibitor selinexor to intensive chemotherapy would improve outcome in this population. 102 AML patients > 65 years of age (median 69 (65–80)) were randomly assigned to standard chemotherapy (3 + 7) with or without oral selinexor 60 mg twice weekly (both arms n = 51), days 1–24. In the second cycle, cytarabine 1000 mg/m2 twice daily, days 1–6 with or without selinexor was given. CR/CRi rates were significantly higher in the control arm than in the investigational arm (80% (95% C.I. 69–91%) vs. 59% (45–72%; p = 0.018), respectively). At 18 months, event-free survival was 45% for the control arm versus 26% for the investigational arm (Cox-p = 0.012) and overall survival 58% vs. 33%, respectively (p = 0.009). AML and infectious complications accounted for an increased death rate in the investigational arm. Irrespective of treatment, MRD status after two cycles appeared to be correlated with survival. We conclude that the addition of selinexor to standard chemotherapy does negatively affect the therapeutic outcome of elderly AML patients. (Netherlands Trial Registry number NL5748 (NTR5902), www.trialregister.nl).
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- 2022
9. Poster: AML-234 Prognostic Value of FLT3-ITD Residual Disease in Acute Myeloid Leukemia
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Christian Vonk, Tim Grob, Mathijs Sanders, François Kavelaars, Melissa Rijken, Diana Hanekamp, Patrycja Gradowska, Jaqueline Cloos, Yngvar Fl⊘isand, Marinus van Marwijk Kooy, Markus Manz, Gert Ossenkoppele, Lidwine Tick, Marie-Christiane Vekemans, Bob Löwenberg, Mojca Jongen-Lavrencic, and Peter Valk
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Cancer Research ,Oncology ,Hematology - Published
- 2022
10. A life-threatening presentation of primary plasma cell leukemia
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Annemiek Joosen, Roma S Fourmanov, Heleen S de Lil, and Lidwine Tick
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Plasma cell leukemia ,Oncology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Primary (chemistry) ,business.industry ,hemic and lymphatic diseases ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Presentation (obstetrics) ,medicine.disease ,business - Abstract
Background: Multiple myeloma is a relatively common type of plasma cell dyscrasia, in which monoclonal plasma cells proliferate. This frequently leads to anemia, renal failure, hypercalcemia and bone lesions. Primary plasma cell leukemia is a much rarer type of plasma cell dyscrasia, with measurable plasma cells in the blood circulation and usually more acute presenting signs. Case: A 57-year-old woman presented to the emergency department with dyspnea. Because of hypoxemia due to a hemoglobin concentration of 3.1 g/dL (1,9 mmol/L), asystole occurred, and cardiopulmonary resuscitation had to be started. The severe anemia turned out to be due to a primary plasma cell leukemia. Palliative treatment was started with combination chemotherapy with VTD (bortezomib, thalidomide and dexamethasone) with a very good partial response, after which she proceeded to an autologous stem cell transplantation with high dose melphalan conditioning. Conclusion: Primary plasma cell leukemia is a plasma cell dyscrasia with both resemblances and differences from the better-known multiple myeloma. It is less common, but presenting signs often are more acute and more severe. Currently there is no curative treatment. Keywords: Plasma cell leukemia; Hematological emergency; Multiple myeloma; VTD.
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- 2021
11. Web-Based Return of Individual Patient-Reported Outcome Results Among Patients With Lymphoma: Randomized Controlled Trial (Preprint)
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Simone Oerlemans, Lindy Paulina Johanna Arts, Jacobien M Kieffer, Judith Prins, Mels Hoogendoorn, Marjolein van der Poel, Ad Koster, Chantal Lensen, Wendy Bernadina Catharina Stevens, Djamila Issa, Johannes F M Pruijt, Margriet Oosterveld, René van der Griend, Marten Nijziel, Lidwine Tick, Eduardus F M Posthuma, and Lonneke V van de Poll-Franse
- Abstract
BACKGROUND There has been a cultural shift toward patient engagement in health, with a growing demand from patients to access their results. OBJECTIVE The Lymphoma Intervention (LIVE) trial is conducted to examine the impact of return of individual patient-reported outcome (PRO) results and a web-based self-management intervention on psychological distress, self-management, satisfaction with information, and health care use in a population-based setting. METHODS Return of PRO results included comparison with age- and sex-matched peers and was built into the Patient-Reported Outcomes Following Initial Treatment and Long-Term Evaluation of Survivorship registry. The self-management intervention is an adaptation of a fully automated evidence-based intervention for breast cancer survivors. Patients with lymphoma who completed the web-based questionnaire were equally randomized to care as usual, return of PRO results, and return of PRO results plus self-management intervention. Patients completed questionnaires 9 to 18 months after diagnosis (T0; n=227), 4 months (T1; n=190), 12 months (T2; n=170), and 24 months (T3; n=98). RESULTS Of all invited patients, 51.1% (456/892) responded and web-based participants (n=227) were randomly assigned to care as usual (n=76), return of PRO results (n=74), or return of PRO results and access to Living with lymphoma (n=77). Return of PRO results was viewed by 76.7% (115/150) of those with access. No statistically significant differences were observed for psychological distress, self-management, satisfaction with information provision, and health care use between patients who received PRO results and those who did not (P>.05). Use of the self-management intervention was low (2/76, 3%), and an effect could therefore not be determined. CONCLUSIONS Return of individual PRO results seems to meet patients’ wishes but had no beneficial effects on patient outcome. No negative effects were found when individual PRO results were disclosed, and the return of individual PRO results can therefore be safely implemented in daily clinical practice. CLINICALTRIAL Netherlands Trial Register NTR5953; https://www.trialregister.nl/trial/5790 INTERNATIONAL REGISTERED REPORT RR2-10.1186/s13063-017-1943-2
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- 2021
12. Anticoagulation therapy patterns for acute treatment of venous thromboembolism in GARFIELD-VTE patients
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Sylvia Haas, Walter Ageno, Jeffrey I. Weitz, Samuel Z. Goldhaber, Alexander G.G. Turpie, Shinya Goto, Pantep Angchaisuksiri, Joern Dalsgaard Nielsen, Gloria Kayani, Audrey Zaghdoun, Alfredo E. Farjat, Sebastian Schellong, Henri Bounameaux, Lorenzo G. Mantovani, Paolo Prandoni, Ajay K. Kakkar, Ab Loualidi, Abdurrahim Colak, Abraham Bezuidenhout, Abu Abdool‐Carrim, Addala Azeddine, Adriaan Beyers, Adriaan Dees, Ahmed Mohamed, Ahmet Aksoy, Akihiko Abiko, Akinori Watanabe, Alan Krichell, Alberto Alfredo Fernandez, Alberto Tosetto, Alexey Khotuntsov, Alisha Oropallo, Alison Slocombe, Allan Kelly, Amanda Clark, Amr Gad, Amy Arouni, Andor Schmidt, Andrea Berni, Andres Javier Kleiban, Andrew Machowski, Andrey Kazakov, Angel Galvez, Ann Lockman, Anna Falanga, Anoop Chauhan, Antoni Riera‐Mestre, Antonino Mazzone, Armando D'Angelo, Artur Herdy, Atsushi Kato, Ayman Abd Elhamid Ebrahim, Mahmoud Salem, Azlan Husin, Barbara Erdelyi, Barry Jacobson, Beatrice Amann‐Vesti, Bektas Battaloglu, Benedicte Wilson, Benilde Cosmi, Bergmann Jean Francois, Berremeli Toufek, Beverley Hunt, Bhavesh Natha, Bisher Mustafa, Bonnie Chi Shan Kho, Boulon Carine, Brian Zidel, Brisot Dominique, Brousse Christophe, Bruno Trimarco, Canhua Luo, Carlos Alberto Cuneo, Carlos Jerjes Sanchez Diaz, Carsten Schwencke, Cas Cader, Celal Yavuz, Cesar Javier Zaidman, Charles Lunn, Chau‐Chung Wu, Cheng Hock Toh, Chern‐En Chiang, Chevrier Elisa, Chien‐Hsun Hsia, Chien‐Lung Huang, Chi‐Hang Kevin Kwok, Chih‐Cheng Wu, Chi‐Hung Huang, Chris Ward, Christian Opitz, Christina Jeanneret‐Gris, Chung Yin Ha, Chun‐Yao Huang, Claude Luyeye Bidi, Clifford Smith, Cornelia Brauer, Corrado Lodigiani, Couturaud Francis, Cynthia Wu, Daniel Staub, Daniel Theodoro, Daniela Poli, Riesco Acevedo, David Adler, David Jimenez, David Keeling, David Scott, Davide Imberti, Desmond Creagh, Desmurs‐Clavel Helene, Dirk Hagemann, Dirk Le Roux, Dirk Skowasch, Dmitry Belenky, Dmitry Dorokhov, Dmitry Petrov, Dmitry Zateyshchikov, Domenico Prisco, Dorthe Møller, Dusan Kucera, Ehab M. Esheiba, Elizaveta Panchenko, Elkouri Dominique, Emre Dogan, Emre Kubat, Enrique Diaz Diaz, Eric Wai Choi Tse, Erik Yeo, Erman Hashas, Ernst Grochenig, Eros Tiraferri, Erwin Blessing, Escande Orthlieb Michèle, Esther Usandizaga, Ettore Porreca, Fabian Ferroni, Falvo Nicolas, Félix Ayala‐Paredes, Firas Koura, Fitjerald Henry, Franco Cosmi, Frans Erdkamp, Gadel Kamalov, Garcia‐Bragado Dalmau, Garrigues Damien, Garry Klein, Gaurand Shah, Geert Hollanders, Geno Merli, Georg Plassmann, George Platt, Germain Poirier, German Sokurenko, Ghassan Haddad, Gholam Ali, Giancarlo Agnelli, Gin Gin Gan, Grace Kaye‐Eddie, Gregoire Le Gal, Gregory Allen, Guillermo Antonio Llamas Esperón, Guillot Jean‐Paul, Hagen Gerofke, Hallah Elali, Hana Burianova, Hans‐Juergen Ohler, Haofu Wang, Harald Darius, Harinder S. Gogia, Harry Striekwold, Harry Gibbs, Hatice Hasanoglu, Hatice Turker, Hendrik Franow, Herbert De Raedt, Herman Schroe, Hesham Salah ElDin, Hesham Zidan, Hiroaki Nakamura, Ho Young Kim, Holger Lawall, Hong Zhu, Hongyan Tian, Ho‐Young Yhim, Hugo ten Cate, Hun Gyu Hwang, Hyeok Shim, Igor Kim, Igor Libov, Igor Sonkin, Igor Suchkov, Ik‐Chan Song, Ilker Kiris, Ilya Staroverov, Irene Looi, Isabel M De La Azuela Tenorio, Ismail Savas, Ivan Gordeev, Ivo Podpera, Jae Hoon Lee, Jameela Sathar, James Welker, Jan Beyer‐Westendorf, Jan Kvasnicka, Jan Vanwelden, JangYong Kim, Jaromira Svobodova, Jaspal Gujral, Javier Marino, Javier Tristan Galvar, Jeannine Kassis, Jen‐Yuan Kuo, Jhih‐Yuan Shih, JiHyun Kwon, Jin Hyun Joh, Jin Hyun Park, Jin Seok Kim, Jinghua Yang, Jiri Krupicka, Jiri Lastuvka, Jiri Pumprla, Jiri Vesely, Joan Carlos Souto, João Antônio Correa, Johan Duchateau, John Perry Fletcher, Jorge del Toro, Jorge Guillermo Chavez Paez, Jose Dalmo Araujo Filho, Jose Saraiva, Jose Antonio Diaz Peromingo, Jose Gomez Lara, Jose Luis Fedele, Jose Maria Surinach, Joseph Chacko, Juan Antonio Muntaner, Juan Carlos Álvarez Benitez, Juan Moreno Hoyos Abril, Julian Humphrey, Julio Bono, Junji Kanda, Juree Boondumrongsagoon, Kai Hang Yiu, Kanchana Chansung, Karin Boomars, Kate Burbury, Katsuhiro Kondo, Kemal Karaarslan, Kensuke Takeuchi, Knut Kroeger, Konstantin Zrazhevskiy, Koscál Svatopluk, Kou‐Gi Shyu, Kristel Vandenbosch, Kuan‐Cheng Chang, Kuan‐Ming Chiu, Kubina Jean‐Manuel, Kwan Jing Wern, Kwo‐Chang Ueng, Lalita Norasetthada, Laure Binet, Lee Ping Chew, Lei Zhang, Leone Maria Cristina, Lidwine Tick, Lilia Beatriz Schiavi, Lily Lee Lee Wong, Lohana Borges, Louis Botha, Luc Capiau, Luc Timmermans, Luciano Eduardo López, Luigi Ria, Luis Manuel Hernandez Blasco, Luis Alberto Guzman, Luis Flota Cervera, Mahe Isabelle, Manuel Monreal Bosch, Manuel de los Rios Ibarra, Manuel Núñez Fernandez, Marc Carrier, Marcelo Raul Barrionuevo, Marco Antonio Alcocer Gamba, Marco Cattaneo, Marco Moia, Margaret Bowers, Mariam Chetanachan, Mario Alberto Berli, Mark Fixley, Markus Faghih, Markus Stuecker, Marlin Schul, Martin Banyai, Martin Koretzky, Martin Myriam, Mary Elizabeth Gaffney, Masao Hirano, Masashi Kanemoto, Mashio Nakamura, Mersel Tahar, Messas Emmanuel, Michael Kovacs, Michael Leahy, Michael Levy, Michael Munch, Michael Olsen, Michel De Pauw, Michel Gustin, Michiel Van Betsbrugge, Mikhail Boyarkin, Miroslav Homza, Modise Koto, Mohamed Abdool‐Gaffar, Mohamed Ayman Fakhry Nagib, Mohamed El‐Dessoki, Mohamed Khan, Monniaty Mohamed, Moo Hyun Kim, Moon‐Hee Lee, Mosaad Soliman, Mostafa Shawky Ahmed, Mostafa Soliman Abd el Bary, Moustafa A. Moustafa, Muhammad Hameed, Muhip Kanko, Mujibur Majumder, Nadezhda Zubareva, Nicola Mumoli, Nik Azim Nik Abdullah, Nisa Makruasi, Nishen Paruk, Nonglak Kanitsap, Norberto Duda, Nordiana Nordin, Ole Nyvad, Olga Barbarash, Orcun Gurbuz, Oscar Gomez Vilamajo, Oscar Nandayapa Flores, Ozcan Gur, Oztekin Oto, Pablo Javier Marchena, Patrick Carroll, Pavel Lang, Peter MacCallum, Peter Baron von Bilderling, Peter Blombery, Peter Verhamme, Petr Jansky, Peuch Bernadette, Philippe De Vleeschauwer, Philippe Hainaut, Piera Maria Ferrini, Piriyaporn Iamsai, Ponchaux Christian, Pongtep Viboonjuntra, Ponlapat Rojnuckarin, Prahlad Ho, Pramook Mutirangura, Rachel Wells, Rafael Martinez, Raimundo Tirado Miranda, Ralf Kroening, Rapule Ratsela, Raquel Lopez Reyes, Raul Franco Diaz de Leon, Raymond Siu Ming Wong, Raz Alikhan, Reinhold Jerwan‐Keim, Remedios Otero, Renate Murena‐Schmidt, Reto Canevascini, Richard Ferkl, Richard White, Rika Van Herreweghe, Rita Santoro, Robert Klamroth, Robert Mendes, Robert Prosecky, Roberto Cappelli, Rudolf Spacek, Rupesh Singh, Sam Griffin, Sang Hoon Na, Sanjeev Chunilal, Saskia Middeldorp, Satoshi Nakazawa, See Guan Toh, Seinturier Christophe, Selim Isbir, Selma Raymundo, Seng Kiat Ting, Serge Motte, Serir Ozkan Aktogu, Servaas Donders, Seung Ick Cha, Seung‐Hyun Nam, Sevestre‐Pietri Marie‐Antoinette, Shaun Maasdorp, Shenghua Sun, Shenming Wang, Sherif Mohamed Essameldin, Sherif Mohamed Sholkamy, Shintaro Kuki, Shuichi Yoshida, Shunzo Matsuoka, Simon McRae, Simon Watt, Siriwimon Patanasing, Siwe‐Nana Jean‐Léopold, Somchai Wongkhantee, Soo‐Mee Bang, Sophie Testa, Stanislav Zemek, Steffen Behrens, Stephan Dominique, Stuart Mellor, Suaran Singh Gurcharan Singh, Sudip Datta, Sunee Chayangsu, Susan Solymoss, Tamara Everington, Tarek Ahmed Adel Abdel‐Azim, Tawatchai Suwanban, Taylan Adademir, Terence Hart, Terriat Béatrice, Thifhelimbilu Luvhengo, Thomas Horacek, Thomas Zeller, Tim Boussy, Tim Reynolds, Tina Biss, Ting‐Hsing Chao, Tomas Smith Casabella, Tomoya Onodera, Tontanai Numbenjapon, Victor Gerdes, Vladimir Cech, Vladimir Krasavin, Vladimir Tolstikhin, W.A. Bax, Wagih Fawzy Abdel Malek, Wai Khoon Ho, Walter Pharr, Weihong Jiang, Wei‐Hsiang Lin, Weihua Zhang, Wei‐Kung Tseng, Wen‐Ter Lai, Wilfried De Backer, Wilhelm Haverkamp, Winston Yoshida, Wolfgang Korte, Won II Choi, Yang‐Ki Kim, Yasuhiro Tanabe, Yasushi Ohnuma, Yeung‐Chul Mun, Yohan Balthazar, Yong Park, Yoshisato Shibata, Yuriy Burov, Yuriy Subbotin, Zdenek Coufal, Zhenwen Yang, Zhicheng Jing, Zhongqi Yang, Haas, S, Ageno, W, Weitz, J, Goldhaber, S, Turpie, A, Goto, S, Angchaisuksiri, P, Dalsgaard Nielsen, J, Kayani, G, Zaghdoun, A, Farjat, A, Schellong, S, Bounameaux, H, Mantovani, L, Prandoni, P, and Kakkar, A
- Subjects
Male ,pulmonary embolism ,Time Factors ,Deep vein ,direct oral anticoagulant ,Practice Patterns ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,heparin ,Direct oral anticoagulants ,0302 clinical medicine ,Pregnancy ,Deep vein thrombosis ,80 and over ,Registries ,Practice Patterns, Physicians' ,ddc:616 ,Aged, 80 and over ,Venous Thrombosis ,Anticoagulant ,Hematology ,Heparin ,Middle Aged ,Thrombosis ,Pulmonary embolism ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Treatment Outcome ,Practice Guidelines as Topic ,Female ,Guideline Adherence ,medicine.drug ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.drug_class ,venous thromboembolism ,direct oral anticoagulants ,deep vein thrombosis ,Aged ,Anticoagulants ,Blood Coagulation ,Drug Utilization ,Healthcare Disparities ,Humans ,Pulmonary Embolism ,Venous Thromboembolism ,03 medical and health sciences ,Thromboembolism ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,In patient ,cardiovascular diseases ,Rivaroxaban ,Physicians' ,business.industry ,deep vein thrombosi ,deep vein thrombosis, direct oral anticoagulants, heparin, pulmonary embolism, venous thromboembolism ,equipment and supplies ,Venous ,medicine.disease ,business ,Venous thromboembolism - Abstract
Background Parenteral anticoagulants and vitamin K antagonists (VKAs) have constituted the cornerstone of venous thromboembolism (VTE) treatment. Meanwhile, direct oral anticoagulants (DOACs) provide physicians with an alternative. The Global Anticoagulant Registry in the FIELD (GARFIELD)-VTE observes real-world treatment practices. Objectives Describe initial anticoagulation (AC) treatment patterns in VTE patients who received parenteral AC, VKAs, and/or DOACs within ±30 days of diagnosis. Methods VTE patients were categorized into parenteral AC only, parenteral AC with transition to VKA, VKA only, parenteral AC with transition to DOAC, and DOAC only. Results A total of 9647 patients were initiated on AC treatment alone. 4781 (49.6%) patients received DOACs ± parenteral ACs; 3187 (33.0%), VKA ± parenteral ACs; and 1679 (17.4%) parenteral ACs alone. Rivaroxaban was the most frequently used DOAC (79.4%). DOACs were more frequently used in North America/Australia (58.1%), Europe (52.2%), and Asia (47.6%) than in Latin America (29.7%) and the Middle East/South Africa (32.5%). In patients with suspected VTE, most received parenteral AC monotherapy (67.7%). Patients with deep vein thrombosis were more likely to receive DOACs alone than those with pulmonary embolism with or without deep vein thrombosis (36.2% vs 25.9%). Active cancer patients received parenteral AC alone (58.9%), with 25.5% receiving DOAC ± parenteral AC and 12.8% parenteral AC and VKA. A total of 46.5% of pregnant patients received parenteral AC monotherapy, 34.0% were treated with VKA ± parenteral AC, and 19.5% received a DOAC (± parenteral AC). Conclusion AC treatment patterns vary by patient population, geographic region and site of VTE. Guidelines for AC therapy are not always adhered to.
- Published
- 2019
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