Thrombophilia and pregnancy
The risk of venous thromboembolism (VTE) increases up to 5-10-fold during pregnancy and VTE represents the first cause of maternal mortality. The annual incidence of VTE is 0.97 per 1000 women during pregnancy and 7.19 per 1000 in the puerperium. The risk is higher in carriers of inherited thrombophilia. Prophylaxis of VTE during pregnancy in thrombophilic women, is still controversial, whereas there is agreement on the used of LMWH or oral anticoagulants during puerperium. LMWH is suggested during pregnancy in antithrombin deficient women, compound heterozygotes for prothrombin G20210A and factor V Leiden, and homozygotes for these conditions, with no prior VTE. In heterozygotes for F V Leiden or prothrombin G20210A with no prior VTE surveillance is preferred during pregnancy and LMWH or OA during puerperium. For patients with APLAs and no prior VTE or fetal loss, one of the following approaches is suggested: prophylactic LMWH and/or low-dose aspirin, mini dose heparin, surveillance (7 degrees ACCP). Patients with APLAs and a history of thrombosis should receive therapeutic-dose LMWH or UH plus low-dose aspirin during pregnancy and long term OA postpartum. In women with prior VTE and inherited thrombophilia, prophylactic or intermediate-dose LMWH is recommended during pregnancy plus post-partum OA. Intermediate-dose LMWH during pregnancy is suggested in antithrombin-deficient women, compound heterozygotes for prothrombin G20210A and factor V Leiden, and homozygotes for these conditions.