The international
Results show that the risk of a post-surgery thrombosis remains at a consistent level for the first four weeks after an operation, while the major haemorrhage occurs primarily in the first several days after surgery and seldom thereafter. These observations are significant for the prevention of blood clots and major bleeds of surgical patients: they suggest that if one is going to administer prophylaxis, it should, because the period of maximum net benefit occurs from several days after surgery to four weeks, continue for four weeks.
In one example condition, the research showed that risk of symptomatic venous thrombosis (deep vein thrombosis or pulmonary embolus) was substantial after open or robotic-assisted cystectomy while risk of major bleeding was not high.
“In such surgeries, the use of anticoagulant medication for four weeks after surgery, is clearly justified,” states adjunct professor
Meanwhile, similar medications may not be beneficial in laparoscopic or robotic assisted prostate surgeries performed on low-risk prostate cancer patients, in which risk for venous thromboembolism are substantially lower.
The second systematic review examined 37 studies that focused on 11 different urological non-cancer surgeries. Based on the results, the use of thromboprophylaxis is justified among high-risk patients undergoing kidney transplant surgery, but in many other urological surgeries, the risk of venous thrombosis is low and the net benefit is likely negative – more harm than benefit.
Both articles also indicated that there is great variation in the use of thromboprophylaxis. This comes as no surprise to Tikkinen, who points out that no systematic reviews had thus far been conducted, and therefore there was insufficient data to create evidence-based guidelines.
“It was interesting to see that the risk of thrombosis remained roughly the same throughout the four weeks following surgery, while severe bleeds took place within days of surgery. At the moment, anticoagulant prophylaxis is overused in many procedures in which the risk of thromboembolism is low. On the other hand, in many high-risk procedures thromboprophylaxis is underused, in particular because treatment duration is insufficiently long.” Tikkinen states.
More information:
Adjunct professor Kari Tikkinen, Departments of Urology and Public Health, University of Helsinki and the Helsinki University Central Hospital, Helsinki, Finland
Tel. +358 50 525 0971
Email:
References:
Tikkinen KAO, et al. Procedure-specific Risks of Thrombosis and Bleeding in Urological Non-cancer Surgery: Systematic Review and Meta-analysis. Eur Urol (2017)
Tikkinen KAO, et al. Procedure-specific Risks of Thrombosis and Bleeding in Urological Cancer Surgery: Systematic Review and Meta-analysis. Eur Urol (2017)
European Urology -lehdessä julkaistut tutkimukset ovat osa CLUE-tutkimusryhmän
Euroopan urologiyhdistys julkaisee mailman ensimmäisen urologisen toimenpidekohtaisen Trombiprofylaksia-hoitosuosituksen vuosipäivillään Lontoossa 24.-28.3.2017. Lisätietoja: h