Junqueira Daniela R G, Perini Edson, Penholati Raphael R M, Carvalho Maria G
Centre of Drug Studies (Cemed),Department of Social Pharmacy, Faculty of Pharmacy, Federal University ofMinas Gerais (UFMG),Belo Horizonte, Brazil.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2012 Sep 12(9):CD007557. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD007557.pub2.
Heparin-induced thrombocytopenia (HIT) is an adverse drug reaction presenting as a prothrombotic disorder related to antibody-mediated platelet activation. It is a poorly understood paradoxical immune reaction resulting in thrombin generation in vivo, which leads to a hypercoagulable state and the potential to initiate venous or arterial thrombosis. A number of factors are thought to influence the incidence of HIT including the type and preparation of heparin (unfractionated heparin (UFH) or low molecular weight heparin (LMWH)) and the heparin-exposed patient population, with the postoperative patient population presenting a higher risk.Although LMWH has largely replaced UFH as a front-line therapy, there is evidence supporting a lack of superiority of LMWH compared with UFH regarding prevention of deep vein thrombosis and pulmonary embolism following surgery, and similar frequencies of bleeding have been described with LMWH and UFH. The decision as to which of these two preparations of heparin to use may thus be influenced by adverse reactions such as HIT. We therefore sought to determine the relative impact of UFH and LMWH specifically on HIT in postoperative patients receiving thromboembolism prophylaxis.
The objective of this review was to compare the incidence of HIT and HIT complicated by thrombosis in patients exposed to UFH versus LMWH in randomised controlled trials (RCTs) of postoperative heparin therapy.
The Cochrane Peripheral Vascular Diseases Group searched their Specialised Register (March 2012) and CENTRAL (2012, Issue 2). In addition, the authors searched LILACS (March 2012) and additional trials were sought from reference lists of relevant publications.
We were interested in comparing the incidence of HIT occurring during exposure to UFH or LMWH after any surgical intervention. Therefore, we studied RCTs in which participants were postoperative patients allocated to receive UFH or LMWH, in a blinded or unblinded fashion. Eligible studies were required to have as an outcome clinically diagnosed HIT, defined as a relative reduction in the platelet count of 50% or greater from the postoperative peak (even if the platelet count at its lowest remained > 150 x 10(9)/L) occurring within five to 14 days after the surgery, with or without a thrombotic event occurring in this timeframe. Additionally, circulating antibodies associated with the syndrome were required to have been investigated through laboratory assays.
Two review authors independently extracted data and assessed the risk of bias. Disagreements were resolved by consensus with participation of a third author.
In total two studies involving 923 participants met all the inclusion criteria and were included in the review. Pooled analysis showed a statistically significant reduction in the risk of HIT with LMWH compared with UFH (risk ratio (RR) 0.24, 95% confidence interval (CI) 0.07 to 0.82; P = 0.02). This result suggests that patients treated with LMWH would have a relative risk reduction (RRR) of 76% in the probability of developing HIT compared with patients treated with UFH.Venous thromboembolism (VTE) complicating HIT occurred in 12 of 17 patients who developed HIT. Pooled analysis showed a statistically significant reduction in HIT complicated by VTE with LMWH compared with UFH (RR 0.20, 95% CI 0.04 to 0.90; P = 0.04). This result indicates that patients using LMWH would have a RRR of 80% for developing HIT complicated by VTE compared with patients using UFH. Arterial thrombosis occurred in only one patient who received UFH and there were no amputations or deaths documented.
AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: There was a lower incidence of HIT and HIT complicated by VTE in postoperative patients undergoing thromboprophylaxis with LMWH compared with UFH. This is consistent with the current clinical use of LMWH over UFH as front-line heparin therapy. However, conclusions are limited by a scarcity of high quality evidence. We did not expect the paucity of RCTs including HIT as an outcome as heparin is one of the most commonly used drugs worldwide and HIT is a life-threatening adverse drug reaction. To address the scarcity of clinically-relevant information on the topic of HIT as a whole, HIT should be included as an outcome in future RCTs of heparin, and HIT as an adverse drug reaction should be considered in clinical recommendations regarding monitoring of the platelet count for HIT.
肝素诱导的血小板减少症(HIT)是一种药物不良反应,表现为与抗体介导的血小板激活相关的血栓前状态。这是一种尚未完全理解的矛盾性免疫反应,可导致体内凝血酶生成,进而引发高凝状态,并有可能引发静脉或动脉血栓形成。许多因素被认为会影响HIT的发生率,包括肝素的类型和制剂(普通肝素(UFH)或低分子量肝素(LMWH))以及接触肝素的患者群体,其中术后患者群体风险更高。尽管LMWH在很大程度上已取代UFH成为一线治疗药物,但有证据表明,在预防术后深静脉血栓形成和肺栓塞方面,LMWH并不比UFH更具优势,而且LMWH和UFH的出血发生率相似。因此,在选择使用这两种肝素制剂时,可能会受到诸如HIT等不良反应的影响。我们因此试图确定UFH和LMWH对接受血栓栓塞预防的术后患者中HIT的具体相对影响。
本综述的目的是比较在术后肝素治疗的随机对照试验(RCT)中,接受UFH与LMWH的患者中HIT以及并发血栓形成的HIT的发生率。
Cochrane外周血管疾病小组检索了其专业注册库(2012年3月)和CENTRAL(2012年第2期)。此外,作者检索了拉丁美洲和加勒比地区卫生科学数据库(LILACS,2012年3月),并从相关出版物的参考文献列表中查找了其他试验。
我们感兴趣的是比较在任何手术干预后接触UFH或LMWH期间发生HIT的发生率。因此,我们研究了RCT,其中参与者为术后患者,以盲法或非盲法分配接受UFH或LMWH治疗。符合条件的研究要求将临床诊断的HIT作为一项结果,定义为术后血小板计数从峰值相对降低50%或更多(即使最低血小板计数仍>150×10⁹/L),在手术后5至14天内发生,无论在此时间段内是否发生血栓事件。此外,需要通过实验室检测来研究与该综合征相关的循环抗体。
两位综述作者独立提取数据并评估偏倚风险。分歧通过第三位作者参与达成共识来解决。
共有两项涉及923名参与者的研究符合所有纳入标准并被纳入本综述。汇总分析显示,与UFH相比,LMWH使HIT风险有统计学意义的降低(风险比(RR)0.24,95%置信区间(CI)0.07至0.82;P = 0.02)。这一结果表明,与接受UFH治疗的患者相比,接受LMWH治疗的患者发生HIT的概率相对风险降低(RRR)为76%。17名发生HIT的患者中有12名并发静脉血栓栓塞(VTE)。汇总分析显示,与UFH相比,LMWH使并发VTE的HIT有统计学意义的降低(RR 0.20,95%CI 0.04至0.90;P = 0.04)。这一结果表明,与使用UFH的患者相比,使用LMWH的患者发生并发VTE的HIT的RRR为80%。仅1名接受UFH治疗的患者发生动脉血栓形成,且未记录截肢或死亡情况。
与UFH相比,接受LMWH进行血栓预防的术后患者中HIT以及并发VTE的HIT的发生率较低。这与目前临床将LMWH作为一线肝素治疗优于UFH的应用情况一致。然而,结论受到高质量证据匮乏所限。我们没想到将HIT作为一项结果的RCT如此之少,因为肝素是全球最常用的药物之一,而HIT是一种危及生命的药物不良反应。为解决关于HIT这一主题的临床相关信息匮乏的问题,在未来肝素的RCT中应将HIT纳入作为一项结果,并且在关于监测血小板计数以诊断HIT的临床建议中应考虑HIT作为一种药物不良反应。