Thrombosis |
From the Division of Haematology/Oncology (SK); Departments of Critical Care Medicine & Anesthesia (PE, BK); Department of Population Health Sciences, The Hospital for Sick Children, University of Toronto, Toronto (PV, LGM); Department of Pediatrics, Stollery Childrens Hospital, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Canada (SK, PM, LGM)
Correspondence: Lesley Mitchell, Stollery Childrens Hospital, Dept of Pediatrics, Pediatric Thrombosis Program, Dentistry Pharmacy Centre, Rm 1130, 11304-89 Avenue, Edmonton, AB T6G 2C7. E-Mail: LesleyMitchell{at}cha.ab.ca
|
|
|---|
Key words: unfractionated heparin, children, bleeding.
Unfractionated heparin (UFH) is frequently used for the prevention and treatment of thromboembolic events in critically ill children. UFH has a short half-life and its anticoagulant effect can be rapidly reversed by protamine in the case of bleeding or if an urgent invasive procedure is required.1 A major drawback of UFH therapy in children is the absence of clinical studies determining a pediatric therapeutic dose range. Studies have suggested that extrapolation of adult treatment guidelines to pediatric care may not be optimal.2–5 Therefore, the primary purpose of the current study was to determine the incidences of bleeding and thrombosis in pediatric patients receiving UFH.
|
|
|---|
|
|
|---|
|
|
|---|
|
|
|---|
There were nine (24%, 95% CI 11–40%) major bleeding events during the study period. The incidence of major bleeding events was 3.33% per person day on UFH, corresponding to 23.1% (95% CI 12–1;44.8%) per patient week on UFH. The characteristics of patients who did or did not have bleeding event are displayed in Table 1. Seven out of the nine patients who had a major bleeding event required one or more transfusions of red blood cells. Details on the bleeding events are shown in Table 2.
|
View this table: [in a new window] [Download PPT slide] |
Table 1. Demographic and clinical data of children with and without major bleeding events. Data are reported as median (range) or relative frequencies (n) where applicable.
|
|
View this table: [in a new window] [Download PPT slide] |
Table 2. Clinical and laboratory data of the nine patients at the time of their major bleeding events.
|
Post-hoc census data from the CCU patient database indicated potentially eligible patients had been missed during recruitment. A retrospective descriptive analysis of 28 patients who received therapeutic doses of UFH during the study period showed no difference in baseline clinical characteristics (data not shown).
The current study found an incidence of major bleeds in critically ill children of 24% (95%CI 11–40%). This incidence represents a major increase compared to previously reported incidences for children (1.5%)6 and adults (2%)7 on UFH. Andrew et al. reported only one major bleed in a cohort of 65 children (1.5%).6 Other studies report similar findings: the Canadian registry on venous thrombosis found no significant bleeds in 115 children with venous thrombosis from different institutions8 and Manco-Johnson et al. reported no major bleeds in 32 non-neonatal children with venous thromboembolism treated with a combination of UFH and fibrinolytics.9 The most likely explanation for this discrepancy is a shift in the patient populations receiving UFH. The most commonly used anticoagulant in children 10–15 years ago was UFH and the population receiving the drug comprised all children, as in the studies by Andrew et al. and Manco-Johnson et al.6,9 Today, low molecular weight heparin is the preferred anticoagulant in clinically stable children, while UFH is almost exclusively used in critically ill children because its action can be reversed relatively rapidly. In keeping with this tendency, only four children (<10%) outside the CCU received therapeutic doses of UFH during the study period.
The lack of a proper monitoring test for UFH therapy in children may have further contributed to the clinically significant bleeding rate seen in the current study. Analysis of the patients laboratory data10 showed that there was little agreement between UFH dose, aPTT and anti-Xa activity. These findings were corroborated by a recent study by Ignatojvic et al.11 In critically ill children with a severely compromised hemostatic system the individual response to UFH is extremely difficult to predict. This may have resulted in inappropriate dosing and may have contributed to the bleeding events in some patients. In the current study, the aPTT was in the therapeutic range for only 15% of the time compared to 43% in the study by Andrew et al.6 There was no significant difference in the duration of UFH therapy or median UFH dose between children with and without major bleeds. In a few patients, an increased International Normalized Ratio and a decreased platelet count likely played a role in the etiology of their bleeding events (Table 2).
Two patients (5%, 95% CI 0–18%) developed a new thromboembolic episode during the study period while on UFH therapy. The risk of a new thromboembolic event during UFH therapy was lower than the risk of bleeding, raising questions of the risk/benefit ratio of UFH therapy. However, the attending physicians not infrequently considered the observed bleeding events less serious than the potentially dramatic consequences of a thromboembolic event, as illustrated by the fact that UFH therapy was continued or restarted after the bleeding event had been treated in seven out of nine children.
The current study has some limitations that need to be acknowledged. Firstly, we were not able to enroll all eligible patients during the study period; although recruitment rates were in keeping with those in other studies in this population,12 this may have resulted in a biased population. A CCU database query identified patients who were missed for enrollment. The clinical characteristics (age, gender, diagnosis, duration of UFH therapy) of these children did not differ from those of the study sample. However, even after inclusion of the 28 missed patients with the most conservative assumption of zero bleeding events, the bleeding rate would still be clinically significant at 13%.
Secondly, the generalizability of the study may be limited as the study population described may not be representative of children receiving UFH at other hospitals. The Hospital for Sick Children is a quaternary care center; other centers may well see less severely ill children on UFH and thus a much lower bleeding rate. The results must, therefore, be interpreted with caution. Thirdly, the current study did not have a control group. Without a control group, it is difficult to determine whether surgical or other complications contributed to the bleeding risk. However, a surgical cause for the bleed could be excluded in at least four of the nine patients.
In summary, the current study found a clinically significant bleeding rate of 24% in critically ill children receiving therapeutic doses of UFH. This finding is probably related to the complexity of the patient population and/or dose of UFH.
SK: responsible for the integrity and analysis of the data, wrote the manuscript; PE: responsible for execution of the research and clinical management of the study patients; BK: responsible for execution of the research and clinical management of the study patients; PM: responsible for execution of the research and clinical management of the study patients; PV: responsible for execution of the research, integrity and analysis of the data; LM: responsible for the conception, design and execution of the research, integrity of the data and analysis of the data, wrote the manuscript.
The authors reported no potential conflicts of interest.
The study was supported by a grant-in-aid from the Canadian Institutes Of Heath Research (MOP 77742) and by an "Erwin Schroedinger-Auslandsstipendium" from the Austrian Science Fund (FWF), Project # J-2038 (S.K).
Received for publication August 6, 2006. Accepted for publication December 6, 2006.
|
|
|---|
This article has been cited by other articles:
![]() |
F. Newall, L. Johnston, V. Ignjatovic, and P. Monagle Unfractionated Heparin Therapy in Infants and Children Pediatrics, March 1, 2009; 123(3): e510 - e518. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
P. Monagle, E. Chalmers, A. Chan, G. deVeber, F. Kirkham, P. Massicotte, and A. D. Michelson Antithrombotic Therapy in Neonates and Children: American College of Chest Physicians Evidence-Based Clinical Practice Guidelines (8th Edition) Chest, June 1, 2008; 133(6_suppl): 887S - 968S. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
S. Kuhle, P. Eulmesekian, B. Kavanagh, P. Massicotte, P. Vegh, A. Lau, and L. G. Mitchell Lack of correlation between heparin dose and standard clinical monitoring tests in treatment with unfractionated heparin in critically III children Haematologica, April 1, 2007; 92(4): 554 - 557. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||