VTE prevention in major orthopedic surgery

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VTE prevention in major orthopedic surgery

Editor's Note: This letter concerns an article in a Cleveland Clinic Journal of Medicine supplement (Preventing Venous Thromboembolism Throughout the Continuum of Care) distributed to only a portion of the Journal's regular readership, owing to the terms of the grant supporting the supplement.

To the Editor: I must make several comments regarding the review by Deitelzweig and colleagues.1

First, all but one of the article’s six authors report having received honoraria, consulting fees, or research funding from companies that market medical products; therefore, their observations are not going to be “clean.”

Second, the most worrisome part of the article is that the authors downplay the issue of bleeding. As recently reported by surgeons from the Rothman Institute of Orthopedics at Thomas Jefferson University, there is a very clear connection in their practice between periprosthetic infection and an international normalized ratio (INR) greater than 1.5.12 All of us in the Hip Society and the American Association of Hip and Knee Surgeons have seen cases with infection directly related to hematoma formation. This has been totally underreported and understated, and was thought not to be scientific until this recent report from the Rothman Institute.12

Third, as an orthopedic surgeon, I have to follow the guidelines of the American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons.11 To blindly follow the guidelines of the Surgical Care Improvement Project (http://www.medqic.org) is asking for less than ideal results in orthopedic cases.

I see a very strong trend toward aspirin. A number of academics in prominent institutions are using aspirin, particularly in knee surgery.

I personally have experience with a group of 350 orthopedic surgery patients whom I have managed based on the approach recently reported by Bern et al—ie, warfarin 1 mg/day for 7 days prior to surgery, followed by variable warfarin dosing during the hospital stay to achieve a target INR of 1.5 to 2.0, followed by a maintenance warfarin dose of 1 mg daily for 30 days after discharge.13 I am very pleased with the results of this regimen. I have not encountered any wound issues, unlike my prior experience when using warfarin dosed to an INR of 2.0 to 3.0. I have currently modified this approach so that all male patients first receive two 325-mg aspirin tablets daily for 2 weeks, then warfarin 1 mg/day for the 7 days before surgery, followed by postoperative warfarin dosed to an INR of 1.5 to 2.0 during hospitalization, and then warfarin 2 to 5 mg/day for 30 days based on the patient’s INR response during hospitalization. The postoperative warfarin dosing requires monitoring, of course.

The results have been far superior to the bleeding rates reported from the Rothman Institute.12 It is unfortunate that an approach such as this, as well as the rationale behind it, was not discussed in your supplement.

References
  1. Deitelzweig SB, McKean SC, Amin AN, Brotman DJ, Jaffer AK,Spyropoulos AC. Prevention of venous thromboembolism in theorthopedic surgery patient. Cleve Clin J Med 2008; 75(suppl3):S27–S36.
  2. Geerts WH, Pineo GF, Heit JA, et al. Prevention of venous thromboembolism:the Seventh ACCP Conference on Antithrombotic andThrombolytic Therapy. Chest 2004; 126(3 suppl):338S–400S.
  3. Geerts WH, Heit JA, Clagett GP, et al. Prevention of venous thromboembolism.Chest 2001; 119(1 suppl):132S–175S.
  4. Zimlich RH, Fulbright BM, Friedman RJ. Current status of anticoagulationtherapy after total hip and total knee arthroplasty. J Am AcadOrthop Surg 1996; 4:54–62.
  5. PEP Trial Collaborative Group. Prevention of pulmonary embolismand deep vein thrombosis with low dose aspirin: PulmonaryEmbolism Prevention (PEP) trial. Lancet 2000; 355:1295–1302.
  6. Berend KR, Lombardi AV Jr. Multimodal venous thromboembolic diseaseprevention for patients undergoing primary or revision totaljoint arthroplasty: the role of aspirin. Am J Orthop 2006; 35:24–29.
  7. Westrich GH, Bottner F, Windsor RE, Laskin RS, Haas SB, Sculco TP.VenaFlow plus Lovenox vs VenaFlow plus aspirin for thromboembolicdisease prophylaxis in total knee arthroplasty. J Arthroplasty 2006;21(6 suppl 2):139–143.
  8. Lotke PA, Lonner JH. The benefit of aspirin chemoprophylaxis forthromboembolism after total knee arthroplasty. Clin Orthop RelatRes 2006; 452:175–180.
  9. Callaghan JJ, Dorr LD, Engh GA, et al. Prophylaxis for thromboembolicdisease: recommendations from the American College of ChestPhysicians—are they appropriate for orthopaedic surgery? JArthroplasty 2005; 20:273–274.
  10. Dorr LD, Gendelman V, Maheshwari AV, Boutary M, Wan Z, LongWT. Multimodal thromboprophylaxis for total hip and knee arthroplastybased on risk assessment. J Bone Joint Surg Am 2007;89:2648–2657.
  11. American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons Clinical Guideline onPrevention of Symptomatic Pulmonary Embolism in PatientsUndergoing Total Hip or Knee Arthroplasty: Summary of Recommendations. http://www.aaos.org/Research/guidelines/PE_summary.pdf. Accessed April 16, 2008.
  12. Parvizi J, Ghanem E, Joshi A, Sharkey PF, Hozack WJ, Rothman RH.Does “excessive” anticoagulation predispose to periprosthetic infection?J Arthroplasty 2007; 22(6 suppl 2):24–28.
  13. Bern M, Deshmukh RV, Nelson R, et al. Low-dose warfarin coupledwith lower leg compression is effective prophylaxis against thromboembolicdisease after hip arthroplasty. J Arthroplasty 2007;22:644–650.
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Willamette Orthopedic Group, Salem Memorial Hospital, Salem, OR

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Editor's Note: This letter concerns an article in a Cleveland Clinic Journal of Medicine supplement (Preventing Venous Thromboembolism Throughout the Continuum of Care) distributed to only a portion of the Journal's regular readership, owing to the terms of the grant supporting the supplement.

To the Editor: I must make several comments regarding the review by Deitelzweig and colleagues.1

First, all but one of the article’s six authors report having received honoraria, consulting fees, or research funding from companies that market medical products; therefore, their observations are not going to be “clean.”

Second, the most worrisome part of the article is that the authors downplay the issue of bleeding. As recently reported by surgeons from the Rothman Institute of Orthopedics at Thomas Jefferson University, there is a very clear connection in their practice between periprosthetic infection and an international normalized ratio (INR) greater than 1.5.12 All of us in the Hip Society and the American Association of Hip and Knee Surgeons have seen cases with infection directly related to hematoma formation. This has been totally underreported and understated, and was thought not to be scientific until this recent report from the Rothman Institute.12

Third, as an orthopedic surgeon, I have to follow the guidelines of the American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons.11 To blindly follow the guidelines of the Surgical Care Improvement Project (http://www.medqic.org) is asking for less than ideal results in orthopedic cases.

I see a very strong trend toward aspirin. A number of academics in prominent institutions are using aspirin, particularly in knee surgery.

I personally have experience with a group of 350 orthopedic surgery patients whom I have managed based on the approach recently reported by Bern et al—ie, warfarin 1 mg/day for 7 days prior to surgery, followed by variable warfarin dosing during the hospital stay to achieve a target INR of 1.5 to 2.0, followed by a maintenance warfarin dose of 1 mg daily for 30 days after discharge.13 I am very pleased with the results of this regimen. I have not encountered any wound issues, unlike my prior experience when using warfarin dosed to an INR of 2.0 to 3.0. I have currently modified this approach so that all male patients first receive two 325-mg aspirin tablets daily for 2 weeks, then warfarin 1 mg/day for the 7 days before surgery, followed by postoperative warfarin dosed to an INR of 1.5 to 2.0 during hospitalization, and then warfarin 2 to 5 mg/day for 30 days based on the patient’s INR response during hospitalization. The postoperative warfarin dosing requires monitoring, of course.

The results have been far superior to the bleeding rates reported from the Rothman Institute.12 It is unfortunate that an approach such as this, as well as the rationale behind it, was not discussed in your supplement.

Editor's Note: This letter concerns an article in a Cleveland Clinic Journal of Medicine supplement (Preventing Venous Thromboembolism Throughout the Continuum of Care) distributed to only a portion of the Journal's regular readership, owing to the terms of the grant supporting the supplement.

To the Editor: I must make several comments regarding the review by Deitelzweig and colleagues.1

First, all but one of the article’s six authors report having received honoraria, consulting fees, or research funding from companies that market medical products; therefore, their observations are not going to be “clean.”

Second, the most worrisome part of the article is that the authors downplay the issue of bleeding. As recently reported by surgeons from the Rothman Institute of Orthopedics at Thomas Jefferson University, there is a very clear connection in their practice between periprosthetic infection and an international normalized ratio (INR) greater than 1.5.12 All of us in the Hip Society and the American Association of Hip and Knee Surgeons have seen cases with infection directly related to hematoma formation. This has been totally underreported and understated, and was thought not to be scientific until this recent report from the Rothman Institute.12

Third, as an orthopedic surgeon, I have to follow the guidelines of the American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons.11 To blindly follow the guidelines of the Surgical Care Improvement Project (http://www.medqic.org) is asking for less than ideal results in orthopedic cases.

I see a very strong trend toward aspirin. A number of academics in prominent institutions are using aspirin, particularly in knee surgery.

I personally have experience with a group of 350 orthopedic surgery patients whom I have managed based on the approach recently reported by Bern et al—ie, warfarin 1 mg/day for 7 days prior to surgery, followed by variable warfarin dosing during the hospital stay to achieve a target INR of 1.5 to 2.0, followed by a maintenance warfarin dose of 1 mg daily for 30 days after discharge.13 I am very pleased with the results of this regimen. I have not encountered any wound issues, unlike my prior experience when using warfarin dosed to an INR of 2.0 to 3.0. I have currently modified this approach so that all male patients first receive two 325-mg aspirin tablets daily for 2 weeks, then warfarin 1 mg/day for the 7 days before surgery, followed by postoperative warfarin dosed to an INR of 1.5 to 2.0 during hospitalization, and then warfarin 2 to 5 mg/day for 30 days based on the patient’s INR response during hospitalization. The postoperative warfarin dosing requires monitoring, of course.

The results have been far superior to the bleeding rates reported from the Rothman Institute.12 It is unfortunate that an approach such as this, as well as the rationale behind it, was not discussed in your supplement.

References
  1. Deitelzweig SB, McKean SC, Amin AN, Brotman DJ, Jaffer AK,Spyropoulos AC. Prevention of venous thromboembolism in theorthopedic surgery patient. Cleve Clin J Med 2008; 75(suppl3):S27–S36.
  2. Geerts WH, Pineo GF, Heit JA, et al. Prevention of venous thromboembolism:the Seventh ACCP Conference on Antithrombotic andThrombolytic Therapy. Chest 2004; 126(3 suppl):338S–400S.
  3. Geerts WH, Heit JA, Clagett GP, et al. Prevention of venous thromboembolism.Chest 2001; 119(1 suppl):132S–175S.
  4. Zimlich RH, Fulbright BM, Friedman RJ. Current status of anticoagulationtherapy after total hip and total knee arthroplasty. J Am AcadOrthop Surg 1996; 4:54–62.
  5. PEP Trial Collaborative Group. Prevention of pulmonary embolismand deep vein thrombosis with low dose aspirin: PulmonaryEmbolism Prevention (PEP) trial. Lancet 2000; 355:1295–1302.
  6. Berend KR, Lombardi AV Jr. Multimodal venous thromboembolic diseaseprevention for patients undergoing primary or revision totaljoint arthroplasty: the role of aspirin. Am J Orthop 2006; 35:24–29.
  7. Westrich GH, Bottner F, Windsor RE, Laskin RS, Haas SB, Sculco TP.VenaFlow plus Lovenox vs VenaFlow plus aspirin for thromboembolicdisease prophylaxis in total knee arthroplasty. J Arthroplasty 2006;21(6 suppl 2):139–143.
  8. Lotke PA, Lonner JH. The benefit of aspirin chemoprophylaxis forthromboembolism after total knee arthroplasty. Clin Orthop RelatRes 2006; 452:175–180.
  9. Callaghan JJ, Dorr LD, Engh GA, et al. Prophylaxis for thromboembolicdisease: recommendations from the American College of ChestPhysicians—are they appropriate for orthopaedic surgery? JArthroplasty 2005; 20:273–274.
  10. Dorr LD, Gendelman V, Maheshwari AV, Boutary M, Wan Z, LongWT. Multimodal thromboprophylaxis for total hip and knee arthroplastybased on risk assessment. J Bone Joint Surg Am 2007;89:2648–2657.
  11. American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons Clinical Guideline onPrevention of Symptomatic Pulmonary Embolism in PatientsUndergoing Total Hip or Knee Arthroplasty: Summary of Recommendations. http://www.aaos.org/Research/guidelines/PE_summary.pdf. Accessed April 16, 2008.
  12. Parvizi J, Ghanem E, Joshi A, Sharkey PF, Hozack WJ, Rothman RH.Does “excessive” anticoagulation predispose to periprosthetic infection?J Arthroplasty 2007; 22(6 suppl 2):24–28.
  13. Bern M, Deshmukh RV, Nelson R, et al. Low-dose warfarin coupledwith lower leg compression is effective prophylaxis against thromboembolicdisease after hip arthroplasty. J Arthroplasty 2007;22:644–650.
References
  1. Deitelzweig SB, McKean SC, Amin AN, Brotman DJ, Jaffer AK,Spyropoulos AC. Prevention of venous thromboembolism in theorthopedic surgery patient. Cleve Clin J Med 2008; 75(suppl3):S27–S36.
  2. Geerts WH, Pineo GF, Heit JA, et al. Prevention of venous thromboembolism:the Seventh ACCP Conference on Antithrombotic andThrombolytic Therapy. Chest 2004; 126(3 suppl):338S–400S.
  3. Geerts WH, Heit JA, Clagett GP, et al. Prevention of venous thromboembolism.Chest 2001; 119(1 suppl):132S–175S.
  4. Zimlich RH, Fulbright BM, Friedman RJ. Current status of anticoagulationtherapy after total hip and total knee arthroplasty. J Am AcadOrthop Surg 1996; 4:54–62.
  5. PEP Trial Collaborative Group. Prevention of pulmonary embolismand deep vein thrombosis with low dose aspirin: PulmonaryEmbolism Prevention (PEP) trial. Lancet 2000; 355:1295–1302.
  6. Berend KR, Lombardi AV Jr. Multimodal venous thromboembolic diseaseprevention for patients undergoing primary or revision totaljoint arthroplasty: the role of aspirin. Am J Orthop 2006; 35:24–29.
  7. Westrich GH, Bottner F, Windsor RE, Laskin RS, Haas SB, Sculco TP.VenaFlow plus Lovenox vs VenaFlow plus aspirin for thromboembolicdisease prophylaxis in total knee arthroplasty. J Arthroplasty 2006;21(6 suppl 2):139–143.
  8. Lotke PA, Lonner JH. The benefit of aspirin chemoprophylaxis forthromboembolism after total knee arthroplasty. Clin Orthop RelatRes 2006; 452:175–180.
  9. Callaghan JJ, Dorr LD, Engh GA, et al. Prophylaxis for thromboembolicdisease: recommendations from the American College of ChestPhysicians—are they appropriate for orthopaedic surgery? JArthroplasty 2005; 20:273–274.
  10. Dorr LD, Gendelman V, Maheshwari AV, Boutary M, Wan Z, LongWT. Multimodal thromboprophylaxis for total hip and knee arthroplastybased on risk assessment. J Bone Joint Surg Am 2007;89:2648–2657.
  11. American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons Clinical Guideline onPrevention of Symptomatic Pulmonary Embolism in PatientsUndergoing Total Hip or Knee Arthroplasty: Summary of Recommendations. http://www.aaos.org/Research/guidelines/PE_summary.pdf. Accessed April 16, 2008.
  12. Parvizi J, Ghanem E, Joshi A, Sharkey PF, Hozack WJ, Rothman RH.Does “excessive” anticoagulation predispose to periprosthetic infection?J Arthroplasty 2007; 22(6 suppl 2):24–28.
  13. Bern M, Deshmukh RV, Nelson R, et al. Low-dose warfarin coupledwith lower leg compression is effective prophylaxis against thromboembolicdisease after hip arthroplasty. J Arthroplasty 2007;22:644–650.
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