Radiation Oncology/Supportive care/Thromboembolism
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Brain Metastases
[edit | edit source]- Brain hemorrhage risk higher with brain mets and anticoagulation
- Treatment is thus a judgment call between risk of brain hemorrhage vs. risk of death/complications from thromboembolism
- MSKCC data suggests <10% risk of significant CNS complications on anticoagulation. Caution with hemorrhagic histologies
- It is important not to reach supratherapeutic levels; LMWH is probably safer from that perspective
- Gamma Knife treatment is not considered a contraindication
- MSKCC, 1994 PMID 8293418 -- "Therapy of venous thromboembolism in patients with brain metastases." (Schiff D, Cancer. 1994 Jan 15;73(2):493-8.)
- Retrospective. 51 patients, 10 treated with IVC, 39 treated with anticoagulation, 2 not treated (both died of PE)
- IVCF: 4/10 recurrent nonfatal thromboembolic events (2 PEs, 2 DVTs) -> 3/4 required secondary anticoagulation
- Anticoagulation: 39 as primary therapy + 3 secondary after IVCF failure. 2/42 patients devastating CNS hemorrhage in the setting of supratherapeutic anticoagulation, 1/42 minor deterioration (overall 7% incidence of CNS complications on anticoagulation). 3/42 asymptomatic with hyperdensity on CT
- Conclusion: Anticoagulation more effective than IVC. Acceptably safe when maintained within therapeutic range
Review
- Hopkins, 2006 PMID 16525187 -- "Management of venous thromboembolism in patients with primary and metastatic brain tumors." (Gerber DE, J Clin Oncol. 2006 Mar 10;24(8):1310-8.)
- Anticoagulation can be used safely and effectively for most patients; IC hemorrhage often due to overanticoagulation
- High risk patients: thrombocytopenia, recent neurosurgery, tumor types prone to bleeding (renal cell, melanoma, choriocarcinoma, thyroid cancer) are relative contraindication
- Mechanical approaches have high complication rate and high failure rates, but can be used if cannot anti-coagulate
- Antithrombolytic agents are absolute contraindication
- Treatment recommendation:
- High risk (craniotomy within 3-5 days, high risk histology, recent bleeding): IVCF
- Acute/progressive symptoms: mini-heparin bolus (40 U/kg IV) or full heparin bolus (80 U/kg IV) for 24 hours depending on severity of TE symptoms. Careful monitoring of therapeutic level. Then long-term LMWH or warfarin
- Standard risk (eg DVT): IV heparin (no bolus) for 24 hours, then long-term LMWH or warfarin
- Paris, 2005 (France) PMID 16224238 -- "Palliative care in patients with brain metastases." (Taillibert S, Curr Opin Oncol. 2005 Nov;17(6):588-92.)
- Prophylaxis: recommended if decreased mobility, with LMWH
- Symptomatic DVH: anticoagulation safe; recommend LMWH due to lack of interaction with chemo and convenience
- Hemorrhagic mets: unless active bleeding, can anticoagulate, but requires strict monitoring
- Avoid NSAIDs and Vitamin K