Thromboprophylaxis in Patients with COVID-19. A Brief Update to the CHEST Guideline and Expert Panel Report.
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BORIS DOI
Date of Publication
July 2022
Publication Type
Article
Division/Institute
Contributor
Moores, Lisa K | |
Brosnahan, Shari | |
Carrier, Marc | |
Collen, Jacob F | |
Doerschug, Kevin | |
Holley, Aaron B | |
Iaccarino, Jonathan | |
Jimenez, David | |
LeGal, Gregoire | |
Rali, Parth | |
Wells, Philip |
Series
Chest
ISSN or ISBN (if monograph)
1931-3543
Publisher
Elsevier
Language
English
Publisher DOI
PubMed ID
35167861
Uncontrolled Keywords
Description
BACKGROUND
Patients hospitalized with COVID-19 often exhibit markers of a hypercoagulable state and have an increased incidence of venous thromboembolism (VTE). In response, CHEST issued rapid clinical guidance regarding prevention of VTE. Over the past 18 months the quality of the evidence has improved. We thus sought to incorporate this evidence and update our recommendations as necessary.
METHODS
This update focuses on the optimal approach to thromboprophylaxis in hospitalized patients. The original questions were used to guide the search, using MEDLINE via PubMed. Eight randomized controlled trials and one observational study were included. Meta-analysis, using a random effects model, was performed. The panel created summaries using the GRADE Evidence-to-Decision framework. Updated guidance statements were drafted, and a modified Delphi approach was used to obtain consensus.
RESULTS
We provide separate guidance statements for VTE prevention for acutely (moderately) ill hospitalized patients and critically ill patients in the ICU. However, we divided each original question and resulting recommendation into two questions: standard prophylaxis vs. therapeutic (or escalated dose) prophylaxis and standard prophylaxis vs. intermediate dose prophylaxis. This led to a change in one recommendation, and an upgrading of three additional recommendations based upon higher quality evidence.
CONCLUSIONS
Advances in care for patients with COVID-19 have improved overall outcomes. Despite this, rates of VTE in these patients remain elevated. Critically ill patients should receive standard thromboprophylaxis for VTE and moderately ill patients with a low bleeding risk might benefit from therapeutic heparin. We see no role for intermediate dose thromboprophylaxis in either setting.
Patients hospitalized with COVID-19 often exhibit markers of a hypercoagulable state and have an increased incidence of venous thromboembolism (VTE). In response, CHEST issued rapid clinical guidance regarding prevention of VTE. Over the past 18 months the quality of the evidence has improved. We thus sought to incorporate this evidence and update our recommendations as necessary.
METHODS
This update focuses on the optimal approach to thromboprophylaxis in hospitalized patients. The original questions were used to guide the search, using MEDLINE via PubMed. Eight randomized controlled trials and one observational study were included. Meta-analysis, using a random effects model, was performed. The panel created summaries using the GRADE Evidence-to-Decision framework. Updated guidance statements were drafted, and a modified Delphi approach was used to obtain consensus.
RESULTS
We provide separate guidance statements for VTE prevention for acutely (moderately) ill hospitalized patients and critically ill patients in the ICU. However, we divided each original question and resulting recommendation into two questions: standard prophylaxis vs. therapeutic (or escalated dose) prophylaxis and standard prophylaxis vs. intermediate dose prophylaxis. This led to a change in one recommendation, and an upgrading of three additional recommendations based upon higher quality evidence.
CONCLUSIONS
Advances in care for patients with COVID-19 have improved overall outcomes. Despite this, rates of VTE in these patients remain elevated. Critically ill patients should receive standard thromboprophylaxis for VTE and moderately ill patients with a low bleeding risk might benefit from therapeutic heparin. We see no role for intermediate dose thromboprophylaxis in either setting.
File(s)
File | File Type | Format | Size | License | Publisher/Copright statement | Content | |
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1-s2.0-S0012369222002501-main.pdf | text | Adobe PDF | 1.41 MB | Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0) | accepted |