Summary
The incidences of fatal pulmonary embolism and death in surgical patients receiving
low-molecular-weight heparin thromboprophylaxis have not been previously determined
in large, adequately designed clinical trials and information on the relative efficacy
and safety of unfractionated and low-molecular-weight heparin in preventing these
clinical endpoints is not available. In a double-blind study, 23078 surgical patients
randomly received the low-molecular-weight heparin, certoparin (3000 anti Xa IU) subcutaneously
once-daily, or unfractionated heparin (5000 IU) subcutaneously three-times daily,
for a minimum of 5 days. The primary outcome measure, autopsy-proven fatal pulmonary
embolism recorded up to 14 days after the end of prophylaxis, occurred in 0.152% (95%
confidence interval (CI) 0.10, 0.20%; 35of 23078 patients) of cases, with no significant
difference between the certoparin-treated patients (0.147% (95% CI 0.077, 0.217%;
17 of 11542 patients) and patients treated with unfractionated heparin (0.156% (95%
CI 0.084, 0.228%; 18 of 11,536 patients, P=0.868). The autopsy rate was 70.2%. Comparing
mortality, there was no significant difference between the groups (1.44% [166 of 11542
certoparin patients] versus 1.27% [146 of 11536 unfractionated heparin patients];
P=0.279). The safety profiles of both treatment groups were similar. Once-daily certoparin
and three-times daily unfractionated heparin are equally effective and safe in reducing
fatal pulmonary embolism and death to low levels in surgical patients and mirror the
findings of comparative efficacy studies using surrogate endpoints.
Keywords
Randomised double-blind trial - low-molecular-weight heparin - unfractionated heparin
- surgical thromboprophylaxis - fatal pulmonary embolism