From the Journals

Supplementary compression doesn’t improve DVT odds in critically ill


 

REPORTING FROM CCC48

The proportion of patients receiving unfractionated heparin versus low-molecular-weight heparin was similar between the two groups, with about 58% treated with unfractionated heparin.

A total of 3.9% of patients in the pneumatic compression group experienced incident proximal DVT, compared with 4.2% of controls (relative risk, 0.93; P =.74). A total of 3.4% experienced prevalent proximal DVT, compared with 2.7% of controls (RR, 1.29; 95% confidence interval, 0.78-2.12). There was no significant difference in the incidence of any lower-limb DVT (9.6% vs. 8.4%; RR, 1.14; 95% CI, 0.86-1.51).

There was no difference between the two groups in a composite outcome that included pulmonary embolism or all prevalent and incident lower-limb DVT (RR, 1.11; 95% CI, 0.85-1.44), and there were no between-group differences with respect to lower-limb skin injury or ischemia.

The results should change practice among those who still provide adjunct intermittent pneumatic compression, however surprising physicians may find these new results to be, according to Dr. Arabi: “People believed strongly that (adjunct IPC) should work, but you need to be evidence based, and here it showed no difference. But that’s why we do studies, right?”

The study was funded by King Abdulaziz City for Science and Technology and King Abdullah International Medical Research Center. Dr. Arabi has no relevant financial conflicts.

SOURCE: Arabi Y et al. CCC48, Abstract 142. N Engl J Med Feb 18. doi: 10.1056/NEJMoa1816150.

Pages

Recommended Reading

Expert panel updates guidelines on antithrombotic therapy for AF
MDedge Internal Medicine
Rivaroxaban gains indication for prevention of major cardiovascular events in CAD/PAD
MDedge Internal Medicine
All patients with VTE have a high risk of recurrence
MDedge Internal Medicine
Tofacitinib and TNF inhibitors show similar VTE rates
MDedge Internal Medicine
ASH releases new VTE guidelines
MDedge Internal Medicine
Phase 3 data support apixaban for cancer-associated VTE
MDedge Internal Medicine
COPD linked to higher in-hospital death rates in patients with PAD
MDedge Internal Medicine
Immunotherapy’s cardiac effects require early monitoring, management
MDedge Internal Medicine
Biomarkers predict VTE risk with menopausal oral hormone therapy
MDedge Internal Medicine
Venous thromboembolism risk elevated in ankylosing spondylitis patients
MDedge Internal Medicine