ORLANDO – In patients with hemophilia who have therapeutic factor levels at the time of joint replacement surgery, prophylaxis against venous thromboembolism (VTE) may be unnecessary.
In a cohort study of patients with hemophilia A or B who underwent total joint replacement surgery while being in proper hemostasis with therapeutic factor levels, there were no clinically evident episodes of venous thromboembolism, even though none of the patients had received perioperative anticoagulant prophylaxis, reported investigators from the National Hemophilia Center and Institute of Thrombosis and Hemostasis at the Sheba Medical Center in Tel Hashomer, Israel.
The data should be reassuring to clinicians whose patients with hemophilia require major orthopedic procedures, said lead author Dr. Anna Seltser, an orthopedic resident at Sheba Medical Center, in an interview.
“We have a lot of hemophilia patients who are not well treated because they live in the desert or distant communities, and we also sometimes treat patients from the Palestinian side of the Gaza Strip who don’t have access to care and need this type of surgery,” she said.
“We collected what I think is the biggest series of patients until now, we didn’t give any of them VTE prophylaxis, and none of them had any DVT [deep vein thrombosis], PE [pulmonary embolism], or similar complication,” she said.
Skip the heparin?
VTE prophylaxis with low-molecular-weight heparin, warfarin, or other anticoagulant agents is a common practice following orthopedic surgery in patients without bleeding disorders. But for patients with severe hemophilia, who often require major joint replacement surgery following years of bleeding-induced arthropathy, it’s unclear whether perioperative anticoagulation is beneficial, the investigators noted in a scientific poster at the World Federation of Hemophilia World Congress.
Dr. Seltser and colleagues therefore conducted a prospective cohort study of 50 patients with hemophilia A or B treated with major joint surgery and subsequent revisions from 1988 through 2015 at their center. In all, 47 patients had severe hemophilia A, 2 had mild hemophilia A, and 1 had hemophilia B.
The authors analyzed data on demographics, comorbidities, type of surgery, use of factor concentrates therapy around the time of surgery, and complications during follow-up, including massive hemorrhage, infections, implant loosening, DVT, and PE.
The patients underwent a total of 74 primary joint replacements (16 hips, 52 knees, and 6 ankles) and 23 revision surgeries.
As noted, there were no episodes of either DVT or PE among any of the patients. All but one complication occurred among patients undergoing total knee replacement. These included three cases of hemarthrosis, three limited-range-of-motion cases requiring closed manipulations, four soft-tissue hematomas, and one case each of superficial wound infection, urinary tract infection, pneumonia, and Candida infection of the tongue.
The only other complication was a case of disseminated intravascular coagulation, sepsis, and hemorrhagic shock in a patient who had undergone a revision (original procedure unspecified).
“Despite the concern that proper replacement factor therapy, applied before and after the surgery, may increase the risk for thromboembolic complications in patients with hemophilia undergoing joint replacement, our data show that prophylactic anticoagulation in this group of patients is not necessary,” the investigators concluded.
The study was internally funded. The investigators reported no conflicts of interest.