Venous Stasis & Hypercoagulability

Obstructive thrombus formation in the deep veins (usually lower extremity) carrying significant risk of pulmonary embolism and post-thrombotic syndrome.

pathophysiology

  • Virchow’s Triad:
    1. Stasis: Immobility, paresis, anaesthesia.
    2. Endothelial Injury: Trauma, surgery, central lines.
    3. Hypercoagulability: Malignancy, pregnancy, Factor V Leiden, oestrogen use.
  • Anatomy:
    • Deep Veins: Peroneal, Anterior/Posterior Tibial, Popliteal, Femoral, Iliac.
    • nomenclature trap

    • The “Superficial Femoral Vein” is a DEEP vein.

    • A clot here is a proximal DVT requiring full anticoagulation.

    • True superficial veins: Greater/Lesser Saphenous, Basilic, Cephalic.

diagnosis

Clinical signs (unilateral oedema, calf pain) are non-specific. Objective testing is mandatory.

pre-test probability

Use Wells Score for DVT to stratify risk.

  • Caveat: Wells score performs poorly in hospitalised/inpatients; maintain a lower threshold for ultrasound.
ScoreProbabilityStrategy
1LowD-dimer
2HighCompression Ultrasound (CUS)

diagnostic algorithm

  1. Low PTP (Wells 1):

    • Order D-dimer (highly sensitive).
    • Negative: DVT excluded.
    • Positive: Proceed to CUS.
    • clinical pearl

    • Use Age-Adjusted D-dimer for patients >50 years:

  2. High PTP (Wells 2):

    • Proceed directly to Proximal CUS.
    • If CUS negative but suspicion remains high repeat CUS in 5-7 days or consider whole-leg US.

management: pharmacotherapy

Apixaban vs. Rivaroxaban for Acute VTE (RCT, n=2760)

  • Status: Presented at ISTH 2025; final publication pending.
  • Safety: Apixaban had significantly less bleeding (3.0% vs 6.7%).
  • NNT: Treat ~27 patients with Apixaban to prevent 1 clinically relevant bleed.
  • Efficacy: Identical recurrence rates (1.0% vs 1.0%).
  • Impact: Suggests Apixaban is the preferred agent for acute VTE.
  • 1. Direct Oral Anticoagulants (DOACs):
    • Apixaban (Preferred): 10 mg PO BID 7 days 5 mg PO BID.
    • Rivaroxaban: 15 mg PO BID 21 days 20 mg PO daily (must take with food).
    • Obesity: Guidelines support both agents for high BMI, though some experts prefer Rivaroxaban for >120kg due to specific PK data.
  • 2. LMWH (Dalteparin/Enoxaparin):
    • Indications: Pregnancy, severe liver disease (Child-Pugh C), severe malabsorption.
    • Note: DOACs now accepted for most cancer VTE (non-GI/GU malignancies).
  • 3. Warfarin:

doac contraindications

  • Pregnancy/Breastfeeding: Absolute contraindication.
  • Antiphospholipid Syndrome: Avoid (esp. Triple Positive/Arterial).
  • Liver Failure: Avoid in Child-Pugh B/C.
  • Thrombocytopenia: Contraindicated if Platelets < 50 x /L (Slide 8). Consult Haematology.
  • Drug Interactions: Paxlovid (Nirmatrelvir/Ritonavir), Phenytoin, Carbamazepine, Azoles.
  • Bariatric Surgery: Absorption unreliable. Use LMWH or Warfarin.

duration of therapy

Shift from “Provoked/Unprovoked” to Transient vs. Persistent risk factors.

Risk CategoryClinical ContextDurationNotes
Transient (Reversible)Surgery, trauma, immobilization, OCPs (if stopped).3 monthsRecurrence risk low (~3% in 5y).
Persistent (Irreversible)Active cancer, IBD, autoimmune disease.IndefiniteContinue as long as risk factor persists.
UnprovokedNo identifiable trigger.IndefiniteRecurrence risk high (~30% in 5y). Reassess annually.
Isolated Distal DVTCalf veins only.Surveillance vs. 3 moSerial US for 2 weeks. Treat if severe symptoms or extension occurs.

long-term extension (>6 months)

evidence update: api-cat & renove (2025)

Question: Can we dose reduce “High Risk” or “Cancer” patients after 6 months?

  • API-CAT (Active Cancer): Reduced dose (Apix 2.5 BID) was Non-Inferior to full dose for recurrence and safer for bleeding. Dose reduce.
  • RENOVE (Chronic/Unprovoked): Reduced dose was Safer (less bleeding) but did NOT meet non-inferiority for recurrence.
  • Bottom Line: Dose reduction is standard for cancer (API-CAT). For high-risk unprovoked VTE (RENOVE), dose reduction is a trade-off (less bleeding risk vs. potentially higher recurrence risk).

hypercoagulability workup

choosing wisely: do not test acutely

Do NOT order a “Thrombophilia Screen” in the acute setting.

  • Acute Phase: Active clotting consumes Protein C/S/Antithrombin false positives (low levels).
  • Anticoagulation: Heparin/DOACs interfere with Lupus Anticoagulant and protein assays.
  • Indication: Only test if results will change management (e.g., stopping AC in a young patient with unprovoked DVT).
  • Timing: Wait >2 weeks after stopping anticoagulation.
  • Exceptions: Genetic PCR tests (Factor V Leiden, Prothrombin gene) can be done acutely but rarely change immediate management.

pregnancy & post-partum

VTE is a leading cause of maternal mortality. Hypercoagulability is physiological (evolutionary protection against haemorrhage).

exam trap

D-dimer is useless in pregnancy. It is physiologically elevated. Wells Score is NOT validated in pregnancy. Strategy: If clinical suspicion exists CUS.

diagnosis in pregnancy

  • Anatomy: Left-sided DVT is far more common () due to compression of left iliac vein by right iliac artery and gravid uterus (May-Thurner physiology).
  • Imaging:
    1. Compression Ultrasound (CUS).
    2. If CUS negative but high suspicion (esp. for isolated iliac DVT causing back/flank pain): Doppler of iliac veins or MRV. Avoid CT if possible.

management in pregnancy

  • Drug of Choice: LMWH (Dalteparin, Tinzaparin, Enoxaparin).
    • Does not cross placenta.
    • Dosing: Weight-based therapeutic dosing.
    • Monitoring: Anti-Xa levels not routinely required (except extreme obesity or renal insufficiency).
  • Contraindications:
    • DOACs: Cross placenta; risk of fetotoxicity. Avoid.
    • Warfarin: Teratogenic (embryopathy, CNS defects). Avoid (exception: mechanical valves in specialised centres).

peripartum & breastfeeding

  • Labour:
    • Therapeutic LMWH: Hold 24h prior to induction or neuraxial anaesthesia (epidural).
    • Prophylactic LMWH: Hold 12h prior.
  • Post-Partum Duration:
    • Treat for minimum 3 months total, including at least 6 weeks post-partum.
  • Breastfeeding:
    • LMWH: Safe.
    • Warfarin: Safe (does not pass into breast milk).
    • DOACs: Unsafe (excreted in milk).

related pages: Pulmonary Embolism, Warfarin, Hereditary Thrombophilia, Superficial Vein Thrombosis