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Evidence summaries

Interventions for Preventing Venous Thromboembolism Following Abdominal Aortic Surgery

There is insufficient evidence to make a definitive conclusion about the use of anticoagulant drugs (with or without mechanical devices) for deep vein thrombosis prophylaxis in patients undergoing abdominal aortic surgery. Level of evidence: "D"

A Cochrane review [Abstract] 1 included 2 studies with a total of 147 subjects (10 deep vein thrombosis event). The earlier study comparing calcium heparin with placebo recruited only 49 out of a planned 150 patients and was terminated due to very high incidence of major bleeding (8/24 vs. 1/25) following heparin prophylaxis (OR 12.0, 95% CI 1.4 to 105.4). At the point when the study was terminated, 24% of the control group and 8% of the heparin group had developed deep vein thrombosis (DVT), but this difference did not reach statistical significance (OR 0.29, 95% CI 0.05 to 1.60). All DVT cases were in calf veins and only one case extended above the calf. The only completed study (n=98) compared unfractionated heparin + calf length compression device with no prophylaxis at all. It reported a very low incidence of DVT (below-knee DVT not addressed) of 2% in both control and intervention group (only 1 patient in each group developed DVT) with no major bleeding or mortality. In the included studies there was only one non-fatal pulmonary embolism.

Comment: The quality of evidence is downgraded by study quality (unclear allocation concealment), by inconsistency (variability in results across studies) and by imprecise results (few patients and wide confidence intervals).

References

  • Bani-Hani MG, Al-Khaffaf H, Titi MA, Jaradat I. Interventions for preventing venous thromboembolism following abdominal aortic surgery. Cochrane Database Syst Rev 2008;(1):CD005509 [Last assessed as up-to-date: 15 July 2009]. [PubMed]

Primary/Secondary Keywords