Patients with venous thromboembolism (VTE) should receive a decision on the duration of anticoagulant treatment (AT) that is often not easy to make. Sixteen Italian clinical centers included patients with recent VTE in the START2-POST-VTE register and reported the decisions taken on duration of AT in each patient and the reasons for them. At the moment of this report, 472 (66.9%) of the 705 patients included in the registry were told to stop AT in 59.3% and to extend it in 40.7% of patients. Anticoagulant treatment lasted ≥3 months in >90% of patients and was extended in patients with proximal deep vein thrombosis because considered at high risk of recurrence or had thrombophilic abnormalities. d-dimer testing, assessment of residual thrombus, and patient preference were also indicated among the criteria influencing the decision. In conclusion, Italian doctors stuck to the minimum 3 months AT after VTE, while the secondary or unprovoked nature of the event was not seen as the prevalent factor influencing AT duration which instead was the result of a complex and multifactorial evaluation of each patient.

Treatment decision-making of secondary prevention after venous thromboembolism. data from the real-life START2-POST-VTE register / Antonucci, E.; Migliaccio, L.; Abbattista, M.; Caronna, A.; De Marchi, S.; Di Giorgio, A.; Di Giulio, R.; Lerede, T.; Garzia, M. G.; Martinelli, I.; Mastroiacovo, D.; Marzolo, M.; Montevecchi, E.; Pastori, D.; Pignatelli, P.; Poli, D.; Ria, L.; Santoliquido, A.; Testa, S.; Palareti, G.. - In: CLINICAL AND APPLIED THROMBOSIS-HEMOSTASIS. - ISSN 1076-0296. - 26:(2020). [10.1177/1076029620945792]

Treatment decision-making of secondary prevention after venous thromboembolism. data from the real-life START2-POST-VTE register

Pastori D.;Pignatelli P.;
2020

Abstract

Patients with venous thromboembolism (VTE) should receive a decision on the duration of anticoagulant treatment (AT) that is often not easy to make. Sixteen Italian clinical centers included patients with recent VTE in the START2-POST-VTE register and reported the decisions taken on duration of AT in each patient and the reasons for them. At the moment of this report, 472 (66.9%) of the 705 patients included in the registry were told to stop AT in 59.3% and to extend it in 40.7% of patients. Anticoagulant treatment lasted ≥3 months in >90% of patients and was extended in patients with proximal deep vein thrombosis because considered at high risk of recurrence or had thrombophilic abnormalities. d-dimer testing, assessment of residual thrombus, and patient preference were also indicated among the criteria influencing the decision. In conclusion, Italian doctors stuck to the minimum 3 months AT after VTE, while the secondary or unprovoked nature of the event was not seen as the prevalent factor influencing AT duration which instead was the result of a complex and multifactorial evaluation of each patient.
2020
anticoagulant treatments; decision; duration of anticoagulation; real-life; secondary prevention; venous thromboembolism
01 Pubblicazione su rivista::01a Articolo in rivista
Treatment decision-making of secondary prevention after venous thromboembolism. data from the real-life START2-POST-VTE register / Antonucci, E.; Migliaccio, L.; Abbattista, M.; Caronna, A.; De Marchi, S.; Di Giorgio, A.; Di Giulio, R.; Lerede, T.; Garzia, M. G.; Martinelli, I.; Mastroiacovo, D.; Marzolo, M.; Montevecchi, E.; Pastori, D.; Pignatelli, P.; Poli, D.; Ria, L.; Santoliquido, A.; Testa, S.; Palareti, G.. - In: CLINICAL AND APPLIED THROMBOSIS-HEMOSTASIS. - ISSN 1076-0296. - 26:(2020). [10.1177/1076029620945792]
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11573/1473372
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