Back to Search Start Over

Venous thromboembolism and port-related thrombosis in metastatic colorectal cancer patients: a monocenter experience

Authors :
Marco Paragona
Guido Biasco
Antonio Maria Morselli-Labate
Marina Macchini
Monica Di Battista
Giovanni Brandi
Roberto Di Cicilia
Jody Corbelli
Elisabetta Nobili
Paolo Prandoni
Nobili E
Di Cicilia R
Di Battista M
Morselli-Labate AM
Paragona M
Corbelli J
Macchini M
Prandoni P
Biasco G
Brandi G.
Source :
Scopus-Elsevier
Publication Year :
2010

Abstract

Venous thromboembolism (VTE) may occur during the natural history of neoplastic disease and is a common cause of mortality and morbidity in cancer patients. Major risk factors for VTE in cancer patients include surgery, immobilization, hospitalization, and the administration of granulopoietic and/or erythropoietic (stimulatory) agents. Chemotherapy is a supplementary independent risk factor for VTE and the use of central venous catheters (CVC) in clinical practice has increased the risk of thromboembolic events. We conducted a retrospective study to evaluate CVC-related thrombosis and the VTE rate in 145 consecutive metastatic colorectal cancer patients. We observed only 2 cases of symptomatic CVC- related thrombotic events (1.38%) and 10 cases of thromboembolic events (6.9%) in our series. Only surgery for metastases was found to be significantly related to the development of VTE, with an incidence of 16.1% vs. 4.4 in patients who did not undergo surgery (p = 0.037). In addition, a history of VTE seems to be a supplementary risk factor for CVC-related thrombosis (p = 0.055).

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Scopus-Elsevier
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....6e7531f3b2da608b365c29d90950f358