Divisions of Surgical Oncology, General Surgery, Trauma, and Surgical Critical Care, Dewitt-Daughtry Family Department of Surgery, University of Miami Miller School of Medicine and Jackson Memorial Hospital, Miami, FL.
Divisions of Surgical Oncology, General Surgery, Trauma, and Surgical Critical Care, Dewitt-Daughtry Family Department of Surgery, University of Miami Miller School of Medicine and Jackson Memorial Hospital, Miami, FL.
Surgery. 2014 Jan;155(1):134-44. doi: 10.1016/j.surg.2013.06.053. Epub 2013 Nov 12.
Rotational thromboelastometry (ROTEM) is a new point-of-care test that allows a rapid and comprehensive evaluation of coagulation. We were among the first to show that ROTEM identifies baseline hypercoagulability in 40% of patients with intra-abdominal malignancies and that hypercoagulability persists for ≥1 month after resection. The purpose of this follow-up study was to confirm and extend these observations to a larger population in outpatient preoperative clinics. The hypothesis is that pre-existing hypercoagulability is present in patients undergoing surgery for malignant disease and that coagulation status varies by tumor type.
After informed consent, preoperative blood samples were drawn from patients undergoing exploratory laparotomies for intra-abdominal malignancies and analyzed with ROTEM.
Eighty-two patients were enrolled, including 72 with a confirmed pathologic diagnosis and 10 age-matched controls with benign disease. The most common cancers involved the pancreas (n = 23; 32%), esophagus (n = 19; 26%), liver (n = 12; 17%), stomach (n = 7; 10%), and bile ducts (n = 5; 7%). Preoperative hypercoagulability was detected in 31% (n = 22); these patients were more likely to have lymphovascular invasion (88% vs 50%; P = .011), perineural invasion (77% vs 36%; P = .007), and stage III/IV disease (80% vs 62%; P = .039). More patients with pancreatic tumors (9/23, 39%) were hypercoagulable than with esophageal (3/19, 16%) or liver (2/13, 15%, P = .034) tumors. When only resectable malignancies were considered, clot formation was more rapid (low clot formation time, high alpha) with enhanced maximum clot strength (high maximum clot firmness) in pancreatic versus esophageal or liver cancers and in all cancers versus those with benign disease.
Preoperative hypercoagulability can be identified with ROTEM and is associated with lymphovascular/perineural invasion and advanced-staged disease in cancer. Compared with other tumor types, pancreatic adenocarcinomas have the greatest risk for hypercoagulability.
旋转血栓弹性测定法(ROTEM)是一种新的即时检测方法,可以快速全面地评估凝血功能。我们是最早发现 40%的腹腔恶性肿瘤患者存在基础高凝状态的研究团队之一,并且这种高凝状态在切除后至少持续 1 个月。本随访研究的目的是在门诊术前诊所的更大人群中确认和扩展这些观察结果。假设是手术前的恶性肿瘤患者中存在预先存在的高凝状态,并且凝血状态因肿瘤类型而异。
在获得知情同意后,对接受剖腹探查术治疗腹腔恶性肿瘤的患者进行术前采血,并使用 ROTEM 进行分析。
共纳入 82 例患者,其中 72 例经病理证实,10 例年龄匹配的良性疾病对照。最常见的癌症涉及胰腺(n = 23;32%)、食管(n = 19;26%)、肝脏(n = 12;17%)、胃(n = 7;10%)和胆管(n = 5;7%)。术前检测到高凝状态的患者占 31%(n = 22);这些患者更可能存在脉管侵犯(88% vs 50%;P =.011)、神经侵犯(77% vs 36%;P =.007)和 III/IV 期疾病(80% vs 62%;P =.039)。胰腺肿瘤患者中高凝状态的比例高于食管(3/19,16%)或肝脏(2/13,15%)肿瘤(9/23,39% vs 3/19,16%;P =.034)。当仅考虑可切除的恶性肿瘤时,与食管或肝脏癌症相比,胰腺癌症的血凝块形成更快(低血凝块形成时间,高α),最大血凝块强度增强(高最大血凝块硬度),与良性疾病相比,所有癌症的血凝块形成更快,最大血凝块强度更高。
ROTEM 可检测到术前高凝状态,与癌症中的脉管侵犯/神经侵犯和晚期疾病相关。与其他肿瘤类型相比,胰腺腺癌的高凝风险最大。