Prognosis in patients with cancer-associated venous thromboembolism: Comparison of the RIETE-VTE and modified Ottawa score.

Details

Serval ID
serval:BIB_3ECC1C61DC2D
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Prognosis in patients with cancer-associated venous thromboembolism: Comparison of the RIETE-VTE and modified Ottawa score.
Journal
Journal of thrombosis and haemostasis
Author(s)
Pfaundler N., Limacher A., Stalder O., Méan M., Rodondi N., Baumgartner C., Aujesky D.
ISSN
1538-7836 (Electronic)
ISSN-L
1538-7836
Publication state
Published
Issued date
05/2020
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
18
Number
5
Pages
1154-1161
Language
english
Notes
Publication types: Journal Article
Publication Status: ppublish
Abstract
The RIETE-VTE score was derived to risk-stratify patients with cancer-associated venous thromboembolism (CAT).
To externally validate the RIETE-VTE score and to compare its prognostic performance with the modified Ottawa score.
We studied 178 elderly patients with CAT in a prospective multicenter cohort and assessed 30-day all-cause mortality, 90-day overall complications (mortality, major bleeding, or venous thromboembolism [VTE] recurrence), and 6-month VTE recurrence. Patients were stratified into RIETE-VTE and modified Ottawa score risk classes (low, intermediate, high). We compared the discriminative power (area under the receiver operating characteristic [ROC] curve) to predict mortality, overall complications, and VTE recurrence.
Fifteen patients (8.4%) died within 30 days, 42 (23.6%) experienced an overall complication by day 90, and 6 (3.4%) had recurrent VTE within 6 months. The RIETE-VTE and the modified Ottawa score classified similar proportions of patients as low risk (35.4% versus 31.5%; P = .37). No low-risk patient died within 30 days. Low-risk patients identified by the RIETE-VTE and modified Ottawa score had similar rates of overall complications (7.9% versus 8.9%) and VTE recurrence (1.6% versus 1.8%). The modified Ottawa score and the RIETE-VTE score had similar areas under the ROC curve for predicting all-cause mortality (0.84 versus 0.75; P = .21), overall complications (0.74 versus 0.68; P = .26), and VTE recurrence (0.67 versus 0.64; P = .78).
Both the RIETE-VTE and modified Ottawa score accurately identified elderly patients with CAT who are at low risk for short-term mortality and who are potential candidates for outpatient care.
Keywords
elderly, malignancy, prognostic factors, risk assessment, venous thromboembolism
Pubmed
Web of science
Create date
05/03/2020 15:10
Last modification date
13/06/2020 5:20
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