Abstract 457P
Background
Cancer patients have a significantly higher risk of developing venous thromboembolism (VTE) compared to the general population. But there are no data on the management of cancer associated VTE at the end of life and no guidance when to stop anticoagulation for the imminent death in hospice care.
Methods
We retrospectively reviewed 153 VTE patients with advanced cancer who were treated with anticoagulation in our hospital from January 2016 to December 2022.
Results
Total 153 patients managed with anticoagulation for the treatment and secondary prevention for cancer associated VTE were enrolled. The median age of patients with 66 years and 69% of patients were female. The median duration of treatment with anticoagulation was 92.3 days. 42% of patients were receiving prophylactic anticoagulation, most frequently low molecular weight heparin. Of these patients, 47 patients continued anticoagulation therapy until death, 22 patients up to 7 days prior to death, 14 patients up to 28 days to 8 days and 15 patients over 1 month. Clinically relevant non-major bleeding was recorded 8 patients. However, bleeding rates increased closer impending death with 6 patients of bleeding in the last 7 days of life. No data were recorded suggestive of recurrence VTE or major bleeding. Despite specialized palliative consultation, at the time of death 30% of patients were still on prophylactic anticoagulation.
Conclusions
The majority of advanced cancer patients with VTE were managed with anticoagulation up to or within days of death in real world. Patients with poor performance status and short prognosis are unlikely to benefit from anticoagulation. Given the absence of guidelines about the use of anticoagulation in terminal cancer patients, it should be an early and multidisciplinary decision. It will be a strategy to improve a rational policy of anticoagulation and to prevent bleeding complication.
Clinical trial identification
Editorial acknowledgement
Legal entity responsible for the study
The author.
Funding
Has not received any funding.
Disclosure
The author has declared no conflicts of interest.
Resources from the same session
602P - COLUMBUS 7-year update: A randomized, open-label, phase III trial of encorafenib (Enco) + binimetinib (Bini) vs vemurafenib (Vemu) or Enco in patients (Pts) with BRAF V600-mutant melanoma
Presenter: Andrew Haydon
Session: Poster Display
Resources:
Abstract
603P - An individualised postoperative radiological surveillance schedule for IDH-wildtype glioblastoma patients (HK-GBM Registry)
Presenter: Jason Chak Yan Li
Session: Poster Display
Resources:
Abstract
604P - Cabozantinib versus placebo in patients with radioiodine-refractory differentiated thyroid cancer who progressed after prior VEGFR-targeted therapy: Outcomes from COSMIC-311 by BRAF status
Presenter: Marcia Brose
Session: Poster Display
Resources:
Abstract
606P - BRAF and NRAS mutations are associated with poor prognosis in Asians with acral-lentiginous and nodular cutaneous melanoma
Presenter: Sumadi Lukman Anwar
Session: Poster Display
Resources:
Abstract
607P - Single institutional outcomes of radiotherapy and systemic therapy for melanoma brain metastases in Japan
Presenter: Naoya Yamazaki
Session: Poster Display
Resources:
Abstract
608P - The efficacy of immune checkpoint inhibitors and targeted therapy in mucosal melanomas: A systematic review and meta-analysis
Presenter: Andrea Teo
Session: Poster Display
Resources:
Abstract
609P - The association between thyroid function abnormalities and vitiligo induced by pembrolizumab regarding prognosis in patients with advanced melanoma
Presenter: Moez Mobarek
Session: Poster Display
Resources:
Abstract
610P - Analyzing the clinical benefit of the evidence presented at these congresses and utilizing a standardized scale to quantify it will significantly enhance our understanding of the studies showcased, allowing for more objective evaluation and interpretation
Presenter: Charles Jeffrey Tan
Session: Poster Display
Resources:
Abstract
611P - ESMO-magnitude of clinical benefit scale (MCBS) scores for phase III trials of adjuvant and curative therapies at the 2022 ASCO annual meeting (ASCO22)
Presenter: Thi Thao Vi Luong
Session: Poster Display
Resources:
Abstract
612P - Is the juice worth the squeeze? Overall survival gain per unit treatment time as a metric of clinical benefit of systemic treatment in incurable cancers
Presenter: Vodathi Bamunuarachchi
Session: Poster Display
Resources:
Abstract