Summary
The natural history of patients with venous thromboembolism (VTE) who develop a major
bleeding complication while on anticoagulant therapy is not well known. RIETE is a
prospective registry of consecutive patients with symptomatic, objectively confirmed,
acute VTE. The clinical characteristics, treatment decisions and outcome of all VTE
patients who had major bleeding during the first three months of anticoagulant therapy
were retrospectively studied. As of January 2007, 17,368 patients were included in
RIETE. Of these, 407 (2.3%) had major bleeding during the study period: 144 gastrointestinal,
119 haematoma, 51 intracranial, 43 genitourinary, 50 other. In 286 (69%) patients
anticoagulant therapy was discontinued, in 74 (18%) not modified, in 38 (9.1%) a vena
cava filter was inserted. During the first 30 days after bleeding, 24 (5.9%) patients
re-bled, 20 (4.9%) had recurrent VTE, 133 (33%) died. Of these, 75 died of bleeding,
12 of recurrent pulmonary embolism. Most deaths occurred shortly after the bleeding
episode (median:1 day).On multivariate analysis, insertion of a vena cava filter was
the only variable independently associated with a lower incidence of fatal bleeding
(odds ratio [OR]: 0.10; 95% confidence interval [CI]: 0.01–0.79) and all-cause mortality
(OR: 0.21; 95%CI: 0.07–0.63). In conclusion, the occurrence of major bleeding in patients
with VTE is outstanding in terms of overall mortality (33% within 30 days), fatal
bleeding (18%) or re-bleeding (5.9%). However, these patients also have an increased
incidence of recurrent VTE (4.9%) and fatal pulmonary embolism (1.2%).
Keywords
Venous thromboembolism - major bleeding - anticoagulant therapy - outcome