VTE and PE Flashcards
What is the leading cause of maternal death in the UK
Pulmonary Embolism (0.7 deaths per 100,000 maternities in the UK), despite significant reductions in maternal mortality
How does use of LMWH affect risk of VTE
Reduces the risk of VTE by 88% in obstetric patients with one previous VTE
When is risk of VTE highest during pregnancy
- Though there is significant risk of VTE in the first trimester, risk increases with gestational age, reaching a peak in the first 3 weeks following delivery (RR postpartum is five-fold higher compared to antepartum)
- C-section is a significant risk factor
Pathophysiology of VTE in pregnancy
- Pregnancy is a hypercoagulable state due to physiological alteration in the thrombotic and fibrinolytic systems (reduces risk of haemorrhage following delivery)
- Increase in factors 8,9,10 and fibrinogen
- Decrease in protein S and antithrombin III
- The weight of the gravid uterus places pressure on the IVC leading to venous stasis, further increasing the risk of VTE
- Immobility further contributes to risk
When should a risk assessment for VTE be undertaken
- All women should undergo an assessment of risk factors for VTE in early pregnancy, after admission for hospital and intrapartum or immediately postpartum
Who should be considered for LMWH
- Any woman with four or more current risk factors (other than previous VTE or thrombophilia) should be considered for prophylactic LMWH throughout the antenatal period and will usually require prophylactic LMWH for 6 weeks postnatally (Should have a postnatal risk assessment)
- Any woman with three current risk factors should be considered for prophylactic LMWH from 28 weeks and will usually require prophylactic postnatal LMWH
- Women admitted to hospital when pregnant should be offed thromboprophylaxis with LMWH unless there is a specific contraindication such as risk of labour or active bleeding
Pre-existing risk factors for VTE
- Previous VTE
- Thrombophilia: Heritable (Antithrombin deficiency, Protein C,S deficiency, Factor V Leiden, Prothrombin gene mutation), Acquired (antiphospholipid antibodies)
- Medical comorbidities- Cancer, HF, active SLE, IBD,, nephrotic syndrome, T1DM with nephropathy, SCD, Current IV drug user
- Age > 35 years (Data is conflicting)
- Obesity (BMI >30Kg/m2) either prepregnancy or in early pregnancy (60% of women who died from PE in the UK (2003/4) were obese)
- Smoking
- Gross varicose veins (symptomatic or above knee with associated phlebitis, oedema/skin changes)
- Paraplegia
Obstetric risk factors for VTE
- Multiple pregnancy, current PET
- C-section, prolonged labour (>24 hrs), preterm birth, PPH
New onset/ transient risk factors for VTE
(potentially reversible and may develop at later stages in gestation than the initial risk assessment)
* Any surgical procedure in pregnancy or puerperium except immediate repair of the perineum
* Hyperemesis, dehydration
* Ovarian hyperstimulation syndrome (first trimester only)
* Assisted reproductive technology (ART) or IVF
* Admission or immobility (>3 days’ bed rest)
* Current systemic infection (requiring IV antibiotics or admission to hospital)
* Long distance travel (>4 hours)
How should women who have had a previous VTE be managed
- All women with a previous history of confirmed VTE should be offered prepregnancy counselling and given a prospective management plan for thromboprophylaxis
- Women with previous VTE (except those with a single previous VTE related to major surgery and no other risk factors) should be given LMWH throughout the antenatal period
- Recurrence rate is around 2-11%
- Some women with previous recurrent VTE require higher doses of LMWH
- Women on long-term warfarin should be counselled on its risks in pregnancy and advised to switch to LMWH as soon as pregnancy is confirmed
- Warfarin causes a characteristic warfarin embryopathy (hypoplasia of nasal bridge, congenital heart defects, ventriculomegaly, agenesis of the corpus callosum, stippled epiphyses) in approximately 5% of fetuses exposed between 6 and 12 weeks of gestation
- Can be safely used after delivery and when breastfeeding (does carry risk of PPH compared to LMWH)
What is a thrombophilia, what are soe hereditary forms
Inherited or acquired changes in the coagulation/ fibrinolytic system
* Hereditary forms include protein S,C deficiency, antithrombin III deficiency, factor V leiden
How should women with antithrombin deficiency be managed, how does this differ from other thrombophilias
- Women with previous VTE associated with antithrombin deficiency (will be on long-term oral anticoagulation) should be offered thromboprophylaxis at **higher doses of LMWH **(either 50% or 75% or full treatment dose) antenatally and for 6 weeks postpartum
- Other heritable thrombophilic defects are lower risk and can be managed with a standard dose of thromboprophylaxis
How should women with antiphospholipid syndrome be managed
- Women with VTE associated with antiphospholipid syndrome (APS- acquired thrombophilia) should also be offered thromboprophylaxis with higher dose LMWH antenatally and for 6 weeks postpartum
- Women with an unprovoked VTE should be tested for the presence of antiphospholipid antibodies
What factors affect the timing of VTE prophylaxis
- Antenatal thromboprophylaxis for those with previous VTE should begin as early in pregnancy as practical
- Women without previous VTE and without particular first trimester risk factors or admission to hospital, but with four other risk factors should be considered for antenatal prophylaxis throughout pregnancy
- Women without previous VTE and without particular first trimester risk factors or admission to hospital, but with three other risk factors, can start antenatal prophylaxis at 28 weeks of gestation
First trimester risk factors include: hyperemesis, ovarian hyperstimulation, IVF
* Women admitted with hyperemesis should be considered for LMWH, which can be discontinued when the hyperemesis resolves
* Women with hyperstimulation should be considered for LMWH in the 1st trimester
* Women with IVF pregnancy should be considered for LMWH in the 1st trimester
Should thromboprophylaxis continue during labour
- Women using LMWH should be advised not to inject any further LMWH once labour begins or if they have any vaginal bleeding (should be reassessed on admission to hospital)
- Regional anaesthesia should be avoided if possible until at least 12 hours after previous prophylactic dose of LMWH (24 hours if on therapeutic dose)
- LMWH should not be given for 4 hours after use of spinal anaesthesia
- Women having an elective c-section should receive a thromboprophlactic dose of LMWH on the day prior to delivery and should not take a dose on the day of delivery
- The first dose of LMWH should be given as soon as possible after delivery provided there is no PPH and regional anaesthesia has not been used
- Women at high risk of haemorrhage (major antepartum haemorrhage, coagulopathy, progressive wound haematoma, suspected intra-abdominal bleeding or PPH) should be managed with anti-embolism stockings. Can also considered unfractionated heparin
(Thromboprophylaxis should be started or reinstituted as soon as the immediate risk of haemorrhage is reduced)