Showing posts with label anticoagulation. Show all posts
Showing posts with label anticoagulation. Show all posts

Sunday, April 12, 2020

Hints on when to anticoagulate your COVID-19 patients

I have written and said this before but I am quite convinced that many of these patients need full anticoagulation. My opinion, not medical advice. This is due to what I have seen in my clinical practice, what others have anecdotally mentioned, and post-mortem data. We need more data to find out when to start it. Obtaining CT scans of the chest and having a radiology tech come in to scan everyone's extremities may not be realistic. This article was published yesterday and I learned about it from Josh Farkas (@pulmcrit). I'll read his take after I put this out. There's ultimately no randomized control trial for anticoagulation in these patients and this is pure clinical gestalt. Please strongly weight risks vs. benefits if you go down this route.

In my practice, I have been keeping track of numerous parameters to try my best to decide when to pull the trigger of when to start anticoagulation. It's a big mystery. As the authors of this paper mentioned, we don't know what is the prevalence of venous thromboembolism in patients with severe COVID-19 infections. They looked at checking d-dimers to predict VTE in these patients.

Retrospective study published on 4/9. They looked at 81 ICU patients in Wuhan, China. They did lower extremity ultrasounds. I am personally reporting that I’ve seen upper extremity VTE's so these could have been missed in the study. They also performed numerous other lab tests.

What they found
25% of patients (n=20) had lower extremity VTE. Again, they didn’t check the uppers.
8 of these 20 patients died.
VTE group: older patients, lower lymphocyte counts, longer PTT (all statistically significant)

What lab value did they find to be most helpful?
D-dimer greater than 1.5mcg/mL.
85% Sensitivity. 88.5% Specificity. 94.7% Negative predictive value.

For some background, an elevated d-dimer is a sign of "excess coagulation activation and hyperfibrinolysis". Once you start anticoagulation, the d-dimer should start coming down. I am seeing this in my practice. I haven't decided where to pull the trigger, though. Anecdotal evidence. Poo poo evidence.

Cui, S., Chen, S., Li, X., Liu, S. and Wang, F. (2020), Prevalence of venous thromboembolism in patients with severe novel coronavirus pneumonia. J Thromb Haemost. Accepted Author Manuscript. doi:10.1111/jth.14830

- EJ


Link to Website with Article

Link to Article



Although great care has been taken to ensure that the information in this post is accurate, eddyjoemd, LLC shall not be held responsible or in any way liable for the continued accuracy of the information, or for any errors, omissions or inaccuracies, or for any consequences arising therefrom.









Monday, April 6, 2020

Anticoagulation in COVID-19

Should we anticoagulate COVID patients? Simple question, not so simple answer.

Autopsies have found occlusion and microthrombosis formation in the small vessels of the lungs. We all know that people have just decided to drop dead for one reason or another after looking fine. Could this also be happening in the heart and kidneys? Can we at least band-aid this by anticoagulating somewhere in the course?

75% of the COVID ICU patients I've personally cared for have developed DVT's of some sort during their hospital course and are currently on full anticoagulation. But could we have predicted this was going to occur and have been proactive when it comes to all this micro and macro thrombi we are seeing? By the way, I have reached out to some hematologists I know and trust for their opinions and no one really knows. Even though I started writing this post yesterday, Josh Farkas beat me to the punch today.

Let's look at the data.

The paper I’m covering today was published on March 27th and came out of China. I'm late to the game. It is a retrospective study. They described "sepsis-induced coagulopathy" based on PT, platelets, and SOFA score.

They found that if the the SIC score was greater than or equal to 4 and the patients had received heparin, there was a decrease in their 28 day mortality from 64.2% to 40%. The number needed to treat with all its limitations was just 4.1 If the SIC score wasn't elevated, it really didn't make a difference. The D-dimer also held its own if it was greater than 6. When this is the case, patients who received heparin had a mortality of 32.8% versus 54.8% without it (NNT=5.1). This isn't the best data in the world and has numerous limitations that you can look at yourself to help you better interpret the study, but I know I will personally be formulating some anticoagulation strategies for these patients in the absence of a large clinical trial. Potential benefit has to be greater than the risks, of course.


It is important to note that the dosing utilized in this paper is comparable to our DVT prophylaxis doing. My curiosity ultimately stems from the utility of full dose anticoagulation. Could that hypothetically lead to even fewer deaths? I don't know.

Has anyone seen any data where patients who are chronically anticoagulated have less severe COVID? I'm curious.

A question for someone smarter than me:

Would there be a difference between using heparin, enoxaparin, or moving straight to the DOACs? I would like to limit the exposure of my nurses in titrating heparin drips.

- EJ

Tang N, Bai H, Chen X, Gong J, Li D, Sun Z. Anticoagulant treatment is associated with decreased mortality in severe coronavirus disease 2019 patients with coagulopathy [published online ahead of print, 2020 Mar 27]. J Thromb Haemost. 2020;10.1111/jth.14817. doi:10.1111/jth.14817
Link to Abstract

Link to FREE PDF



Although great care has been taken to ensure that the information in this post is accurate, eddyjoemd, LLC shall not be held responsible or in any way liable for the continued accuracy of the information, or for any errors, omissions or inaccuracies, or for any consequences arising therefrom.