Deep Venous Thrombosis Clinical Trial
Official title:
Comparison of the Recanalization Rate and Incidence of Postthrombotic Syndrome in Patients With Lower-limb Deep Venous Thrombosis Treated With Rivaroxaban or Warfarin
This is a prospective, randomized study, aiming to evaluate patients with Deep Venous Thrombosis in lower limbs and the recanalization rates evaluated with DUPLEX ultrasound, as so the clinical outcomes in patients submitted to oral anticoagulation with Rivaroxaban versus Warfarin.
This study was approved by the Research Ethics Committee of the Hospital do Servidor Público
Estadual, São Paulo, Brazil, and was registered at clinicaltrials.gov under NCT 02704598.
This prospective, randomized, consecutive, double-blind cohort study included patients
treated for acute iliofemoral and/or femoropopliteal DVT of a lower limb at the Division of
Vascular and Endovascular Surgery, Hospital do Servidor Público Estadual, São Paulo, Brazil,
between march 2016 and July 2018. The patient data were collected during an appointment at
the routine follow-up, and recorded with the proper protocols. The data obtained included the
patient's general and demographic characteristics, and the information recorded during the
outpatient follow-up visits. This research received no specific funding.
The noninclusion criteria were: pregnancy, age < 18 years or > 80 years, chronic renal
failure, chronic hepatic chronic failure, inferior vena cava thrombosis, contraindication for
any type of anticoagulation, previous DVT on the ipsilateral affected limb, or any type of
active cancer, and patients who refused to participate in the study.
The exclusion criteria were: several hemorrhagic complications that required the
discontinuation of anticoagulation, death after < 30 days, allergic reaction to any
anticoagulant, a diagnosis of active cancer during follow-up, loss to follow-up, difficulty
in achieving proper anticoagulation due to patient nonadherence to the treatment protocol,
and incomplete data.
The diagnosis of DVT was made with clinical signs and symptoms, laboratory tests such as
D-dimer, and routine DUS of the affected limb. The criteria used to confirm acute DVT with
DUS were the absence or diminution of venous flow, incompressibility of the vessel, visible
thrombus, enlarged vein diameter, immobility of the valves, and loss of respiratory
phasicity.13 All the patients diagnosed with acute DVT were hospitalized and received initial
anticoagulation with subcutaneous enoxaparin (1 mg/kg/dose) every 12 h (12/12 h) or
intravenous unfractionated heparin (IUH) (loading dose 80 UI/kg, and 18 UI/kg/h) for at least
48-72 h. The infusion dose of IUH was adjusted to achieve the therapeutic activated partial
thromboplastin time (APTT) established by the hospital laboratory within every 4-6 h period.
After initial admission, the patients were randomized into two groups: group 1 patients
received oral rivaroxaban, with a loading dose of 15 mg 12/12 h for 21 days after the initial
dose, and 20 mg/day for 6 months; group 2 patients received oral warfarin, sufficient to
maintain an INR of 2-3 for 6 months. The patients in group 2 were kept in hospital on
subcutaneous enoxaparin or intravenous unfractionated heparin until their INR was 2-3. The
patients were discharged after their INR achieved the therapeutic dose.
During the follow-up visits, all the patients were subjected to a DUS analysis by a physician
blinded to the type of drug therapy, with defined protocols that assessed the compressibility
of the external iliac vein, common femoral vein, superficial femoral vein, and popliteal
vein. Flow recanalization was evaluated by confirming the total vein flow, the partial vein
flow, or the absence of vein flow. All vessels evaluated were tested for the absence or
presence of reflux and the grade of reflux.
The following ultrasound criteria were used to determine absence of recanalization flow:
partial compressibility of the vein, diminution of the vessel diameter, heterogeneous and
hyperechoic thrombus, multiple channels of flow inside the veins, reflux, and collateral
circulation.13 All the patients were followed-up with outpatient visits at 1, 3, 6, and 12
months after discharge. The following information was recorded at each visit: physical
examination, DUS and laboratory tests, such as D-dimer, for all patients, and INR for
patients receiving warfarin. The patients in group 2 were seen once a week to ensure that
their INR remained at 2-3 and to confirm adequate anticoagulation. At the physical
examination, the thigh was measured with a tape measure in the medium segment and the legs in
the proximal segments, to record their diameters, in order to objectively assess the
improvement in the swelling and edema of the leg.
A diagnosis of PTS was made with the Villalta scale when the patient's symptoms had remained
unresolved for 6 months after treatment.9 The scale's components (five symptoms and six
signs) are each rated on a 4-point severity scale, and the points are summed to produce a
total score. A score > 4 indicates PTS. The five symptoms (pain, cramps, heaviness, pruritus,
and paresthesia) were assessed by patient self-report, and the six signs (edema, skin
induration, hyperpigmentation, venous ectasia, redness, and pain during calf compression) by
a clinician. The severity of each symptom and sign was rated as 0 (absent), 1 (mild), 2
(moderate), or 3 (severe). These were summed to yield the total Villalta PTS score: 0-4, no
PTS; 5-9, mild PTS; 10-14, moderate PTS; ≥ 15 or presence of an ulcer, severe PTS.
The purpose of this study was to examine the long-term outcomes (after 12 months) in two
groups of patients after treatment for DVT, by comparing the DUS-detected recanalization
rates and the occurrence of PTS. The secondary end-points of the analysis were the prevalence
of pulmonary embolism, death, complications of treatment, and DVT relapse.
The statistical analyses were performed with SPSS 15.0 for Windows® (SPSS Inc., Chicago, IL),
as percentages of patients and descriptive statistics. The χ2 test and Student's t test were
used to compare univariate data and differences between groups. Linear and Cox's regressions
were used in the univariate and multivariable analyses, and the results are reported as
adjusted hazard ratios (HRs) with the accompanying 95% confidence intervals (CIs). ANOVA and
a post hoc test were used in the analysis of groups. In all analyses, p values of < 0.05 were
considered statistically significant.
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