Thromb Haemost 2009; 102(01): 56-61
DOI: 10.1160/TH09-02-0097
Blood Coagulation, Fibrinolysis and Cellular Haemostasis
Schattauer GmbH

Lack of extended venous thromboembolism prophylaxis in high-risk patients undergoing major orthopaedic or major cancer surgery

Electronic Assessment of VTE Prophylaxis in High-Risk Surgical Patients at Discharge from Swiss Hospitals (ESSENTIAL)
Christoph Kalka
1   University Hospital Berne, Switzerland
,
David Spirk
2   sanofi-aventis (suisse) sa Meyrin, Switzerland
,
Klaus-Arno Siebenrock
1   University Hospital Berne, Switzerland
,
Urs Metzger
3   City Hospital Triemli Zurich, Switzerland
,
Philipp Tuor
4   City Hospital Waid Zurich, Switzerland
,
Daniel Sterzing
5   Cantonal Hospital Muensterlingen, Switzerland
,
Kurt Oehy
6   Cantonal Hospital Frauenfeld, Switzerland
,
Daniela Wondberg
7   Cantonal Hospital Olten, Switzerland
,
El Yazid Mouhsine
8   University Hospital Lausanne, Switzerland
,
Emanuel Gautier
9   Cantonal Hospital Fribourg, Switzerland
,
Nils Kucher
10   University Hospital Zurich, Switzerland
› Author Affiliations

Financial support: ESSENTIAL was funded by sanofi-aventis (suisse) sa, Meyrin, Switzerland.
Further Information

Publication History

Received: 21 February 2009

Accepted after major revision: 03 April 2009

Publication Date:
24 November 2017 (online)

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Summary

Extended pharmacological venous thromboembolism (VTE) prophylaxis beyond discharge is recommended for patients undergoing high-risk surgery. We prospectively investigated prophylaxis in 1,046 consecutive patients undergoing major orthopaedic (70%) or major cancer surgery (30%) in 14 Swiss hospitals. Appropriate in-hospital prophylaxis was used in 1,003 (96%) patients. At discharge, 638 (61%) patients received prescription for extended pharmacological prophylaxis: 564 (77%) after orthopaedic surgery, and 74 (23%) after cancer surgery (p <0.001). Patients with knee replacement (94%), hip replacement (81%), major trauma (80%), and curative arthroscopy (73%) had the highest prescription rates for extended VTE prophylaxis; the lowest rates were found in patients undergoing major surgery for thoracic (7%),gastrointestinal (19%),and hepatobiliary (33%) cancer. The median duration of prescribed extended prophylax is was longer in patients with orthopaedic surgery (32 days, interquartile range 14–40 days) than in patients with cancer surgery (23 days, interquartile range 11–30 days; p<0.001).Among the 278 patients with an extended prophylaxis order after hip replacement, knee replacement, or hip fracture surgery, 120 (43%) received a prescription for at least 35 days, and among the 74 patients with an extended prophylaxis order after major cancer surgery, 20 (27%) received a prescription for at least 28 days. In conclusion, approximately one quarter of the patients with major orthopaedic surgery and more than three quarters of the patients with major cancer surgery did not receive prescription for extended VTE prophylaxis. Future effort should focus on the improvement of extended VTE prophylaxis, particularly in patients undergoing major cancer surgery.

Both authors contributed equally to the study.