Xu Yan, Mallity Caroline, Collins Erin, Siegal Deborah M, Wang Tzu-Fei, Carrier Marc
Department of Medicine, Ottawa Hospital Research Institute, University of Ottawa, Ottawa, K1H 8M2, Canada.
School of Epidemiology and Public Health, Faculty of Medicine, University of Ottawa, Ottawa, K1G 5Z3, Canada.
Eur Heart J Cardiovasc Pharmacother. 2025 Jan 11;10(8):665-675. doi: 10.1093/ehjcvp/pvae068.
The incidence of arterial thromboembolism (ATE) among ambulatory cancer patients varies by primary tumour site. However, it is unclear whether this alters the benefit-to-harm profile of prophylactic anticoagulation for ATE prevention. Therefore, we systematically evaluated the efficacy and safety of anticoagulants for ATE prevention among ambulatory cancer patients according to the primary tumour site.
We conducted a systematic review using Medline, Embase, SCOPUS, and CENTRAL, and included randomized trials comparing prophylactic anticoagulation to no anticoagulation among ambulatory cancer patients who initiated tumour-directed systemic therapy. The incidence of symptomatic ATE (acute ischaemic stroke, acute myocardial infarction, or peripheral artery occlusion) and major bleeding, as well as risk differences (RDs) attributable to anticoagulation, were meta-analysed by primary tumour site using random-effects modelling. We included 10 randomized controlled trials with 9875 patients with follow-up ranging from 3.3 to 68 (median 6.6) months. While prophylactic anticoagulation did not reduce ATE risks overall (RD -0.49%; 95% CI -0.49% to 0.01%; I2 = 0%), it conferred a protective effect among pancreatic cancer patients (RD -3.2%; 95%CI -5.7% to -0.8%; I2 = 0%) without a detectable increase in major bleeding (RD -1.4%; 95% CI -4.6% to 1.8%; I2 = 0%). Prophylactic anticoagulation was not associated with ATE risk reduction in other tumour sites.
Based on available evidence, prophylactic anticoagulation did not reduce ATE risk among ambulatory cancer patients overall. However, we observed a lower incidence of ATE among pancreatic cancer patients randomized to receive anticoagulation. Prophylactic anticoagulant use to reduce ATEs in pancreatic cancer should be evaluated in future research.
门诊癌症患者中动脉血栓栓塞(ATE)的发生率因原发肿瘤部位而异。然而,尚不清楚这是否会改变预防性抗凝预防ATE的利弊情况。因此,我们根据原发肿瘤部位系统评估了门诊癌症患者中抗凝剂预防ATE的疗效和安全性。
我们使用Medline、Embase、SCOPUS和CENTRAL进行了一项系统评价,纳入了比较门诊癌症患者在开始肿瘤导向性全身治疗时预防性抗凝与不抗凝的随机试验。使用随机效应模型,按原发肿瘤部位对有症状的ATE(急性缺血性卒中、急性心肌梗死或外周动脉闭塞)和大出血的发生率以及抗凝所致的风险差异(RDs)进行荟萃分析。我们纳入了10项随机对照试验,共9875例患者,随访时间为3.3至68(中位数6.6)个月。虽然预防性抗凝总体上未降低ATE风险(RD -0.49%;95%CI -0.49%至0.01%;I² = 0%),但在胰腺癌患者中具有保护作用(RD -3.2%;95%CI -5.7%至-0.8%;I² = 0%),且大出血未出现可检测到的增加(RD -1.4%;95%CI -4.6%至1.8%;I² = 0%)。预防性抗凝与其他肿瘤部位的ATE风险降低无关。
基于现有证据,预防性抗凝总体上未降低门诊癌症患者的ATE风险。然而,我们观察到随机接受抗凝治疗的胰腺癌患者中ATE发生率较低。未来研究应评估使用预防性抗凝剂降低胰腺癌患者ATE的情况。