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Risk for Arterial Thromboembolic Events (ATEs) in Patients with Advanced Urinary Tract Cancer (aUTC) Treated with First-Line Chemotherapy: Single-Center, Observational Study

Authors :
Aristotelis Bamias
Kimon Tzannis
Roubini Zakopoulou
Minas Sakellakis
John Dimitriadis
Alkistis Papatheodoridi
Loukianos Rallidis
Panagiotis Halvatsiotis
Anna Tsiara
Maria Kaparelou
Efthymios Kostouros
Despina Barbarousi
Konstantinos Koutsoukos
Evangelos Fragiadis
Athanasios E. Dellis
Ioannis Anastasiou
Konstantinos Stravodimos
Alexandros Pinitas
Athanasios Papatsoris
Ioannis Adamakis
Ioannis Varkarakis
Charalampos Fragoulis
Stamatina Pagoni
Charis Matsouka
Andreas Skolarikos
Dionysios Mitropoulos
Konstantinos Doumas
Charalampos Deliveliotis
Constantinos Constantinides
Meletios-Athanasios Dimopoulos
Source :
Current Oncology; Volume 29; Issue 9; Pages: 6077-6090
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
MDPI AG, 2022.

Abstract

Arterial thromboembolism has been associated with cancer or its treatment. Unlike venous thromboembolism, the incidence and risk factors have not been extensively studied. Here, we investigated the incidence of arterial thromboembolic events (ATEs) in an institutional series of advanced urinary tract cancer (aUTC) treated with cytotoxic chemotherapy. The ATE definition included peripheral arterial embolism/thrombosis, ischemic stroke and coronary events. A total of 354 aUTC patients were analyzed. Most patients (95.2%) received platinum-based chemotherapy. A total of 12 patients (3.4%) suffered an ATE within a median time of 3.6 months from the start of chemotherapy. The most frequent ATE was ischemic stroke (n = 7). Two ATEs were fatal. The 6-month and 24-month incidence were 2.1% (95% confidence interval [CI]: 0.9–4.1) and 3.6% (95% CI: 1.9–6.2), respectively. Perioperative chemotherapy increased the risk for ATE by 5.55-fold. Tumors other than UTC and pure non-transitional cell carcinoma histology were also independent risk factors. No association with the type of chemotherapy was found. Overall, ATEs occur in 4.6% of aUTC patients treated with chemotherapy and represent a clinically relevant manifestation. Perioperative chemotherapy significantly increases the risk for ATE. The role of prophylaxis in high-risk groups should be prospectively studied.

Details

ISSN :
17187729
Volume :
29
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Current Oncology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....331b02438f588cd5a80ca27d5f6ac4ac