Anticoagulant therapies and outcomes in obese patients with acute venous thromboembolism.

Journal: Thrombosis Research
Published:
Abstract

Background: Direct oral anticoagulants (DOACs) are recommended in preference to traditional anticoagulants (LMWH ± warfarin) for treating acute venous thromboembolism (VTE). However, guidelines suggest avoiding DOACs in those >120 kg given limited data.

Objective: To capture outcome and prescription fill data in a cohort of patients >120 kg with acute VTE out to 1 year.

Methods: Using linked administrative data, a retrospective sub-study of obese patients (>120 kg) with acute VTE discharged from institutions from 2014 to 2017 was performed. Primarily, the overall rate of recurrent VTE was assessed. Secondarily, anticoagulant regimens (agent/dosing) and bleeding events were recorded with recurrent events confirmed by chart reviews. Outcomes were compared between DOACs and traditional therapies.

Results: Amongst 187 patients included, the overall rate of recurrent VTE out to 1 year was 0.006 events/patient year, and the only event during the entire follow-up occurred off therapy. Throughout the year, 38.5% were prescribed a DOAC only, 32.6% were prescribed traditional therapy only and 23.5% were switched from LMWH/warfarin to a DOAC. The proportion of patients receiving sub-therapeutic, standard or supra-therapeutic regimens were: DOAC (11.1%, 85.2%, 3.7%), LMWH (24.2%, 71.0%, 4.8%), warfarin (30.4%, 55.0%, 15.0%). Bleeding occurred in 9 (8.3%) and 9 (11.5%) patients on DOAC and traditional therapy, respectively (relative risk 0.85 [95%CI 0.44-1.28]).

Conclusions: More obese patients with acute VTE were prescribed DOACs than traditional therapies. Standard dosing was used for DOACs (85.2%), whereas sub-optimal dosing occurred for 25-33% receiving traditional therapies. Rates of recurrent VTE and bleeding were similar in the two groups, lending support for DOAC use in this population.

Authors
Steven Quan, Jenna Smith, Cynthia Wu, Sheri Koshman, Binh Nguyen, Tammy Bungard