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The Relationship Between the Lack of AT-Ⅲ, PC, PS Activity and PICC-related Thrombosis

Zhejiang University logo

Zhejiang University

Status

Unknown

Conditions

Central Venous Catheter Thrombosis

Treatments

Diagnostic Test: Venous blood collecting and test and ultrasound screening

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT04535206
2018-005

Details and patient eligibility

About

PICC related venous thrombosis (PICC-RVT) is one of the common complications of PICC and the main cause of unplanned extubation. Effectively identifying the risk of PICC-RVT in patients and preventing PICC-RVT are of great clinical significance. There are many studies on the risk factors of VTE at home and abroad, and there are also many studies on the risk assessment of PICC catheter-related thrombosis, mostly focusing on sociodemographic data, comorbidities, and intubation related factors, while the research on laboratory related indicators is limited It involves D-dimer, white blood cell count (WBC), platelet count (PLT), etc., but its specificity or positive predictive value is not high, and there is no reliable biomarker report. Studies have shown that the decrease or lack of AT-Ⅲ, PC, PS activity is one of the mechanisms of hypercoagulable state in patients with cancer, and may be a biomarker of thrombosis. Many retrospective studies have also shown that the activities of AT-Ⅲ, PC, and PS are related to the occurrence and recurrence of VTE and DVT. The pathogenesis is mainly anticoagulant protein defect or decreased expression. However, when PICC is implanted in patients with AT-Ⅲ, PC and PS activity defects, whether PICC indwelling will become a predisposing factor of thrombosis is not yet known. Therefore, the purpose of this study is to understand the rate of anticoagulant protein deficiency in patients with tumor PICC-RVT, and to prospectively explore the correlation between the lack of AT-Ⅲ, PC, and PS activities and PICC-RVT, and to provide targeted preventive interventions for PICC-RVT patients Scientific basis.

Full description

A prospective study showed that a mild reduction in AT levels (70%-80%) was associated with the recurrence of no incentive VTE. Subsequent studies defined mild AT deficiency as less than the 5th percentile of the normal range to further verify that mild AT deficiency is a risk factor for VTE recurrence. Many retrospective studies have also shown that the activities of AT-Ⅲ, PC and PS are related to the occurrence and recurrence of VTE and DVT. Taking the lower limit of the normal reference value as the criterion for judging the lack of anticoagulant protein activity, Zhu Tienan et al. found that the lack of activity of AT, PC, and PS in normal people were 1.15%, 1.49%, and 2.29%, respectively. Fang Biqian et al. found 277 cases of VTE. Among the cases found that the lack of activity of AT, PC, and PS were 16.00%, 17.45%, and 17.09%, respectively. That is, the lack of activity of the three anticoagulant proteins in VTE patients was about 10 times higher than that of normal people. Chinese scholars from Taiwan, Hong Kong and Shanghai also found that the total lack of three anticoagulant proteins of AT-Ⅲ, PC and PS exceeds 15% in Western countries, suggesting that the etiological composition of venous thromboembolism in the Chinese population may be similar to that of Western countries. Different, reflecting that anticoagulant protein deficiency plays an important role in the pathogenesis of VTE patients in China. Compared with factor V Leiden mutation and prothrombin 20210A mutation, the most common thrombosis in Asian population is antithrombin Ⅲ (AT-Ⅲ), protein C (protein C, PC) and protein S (protein S, PS), etc. Defects of anticoagulant protein. When the hypercoagulable state caused by anticoagulant protein deficiency is induced by certain risk factors for thrombosis, such as pregnancy, oral contraceptives, fractures, long-term immobilization, etc., it can lead to the occurrence of VTE. When PICC is implanted in patients with AT-Ⅲ, PC and PS activity defects, whether PICC indwelling will become a predisposing factor of thrombosis is not yet known.

It has been reported that the severity of CVC-related thrombosis in patients with AT-Ⅲ deficiency after CVC catheterization is higher than that of the normal group. Nowak-Göttl et al. showed that PC and PS genetic defects are related to catheterization in children Thrombosis plays an important role. In 2016, a systematic review showed that the risk of DVT related to more than one anticoagulant defect increased by 3.20 times. PC defects can increase the incidence of CVC-related DVT in children. Our preliminary study of this subject found that the lack of anticoagulant protein in PICC-RVT patients was higher than that in non-PICC-RVT patients.

Enrollment

112 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Age ≥18 years; Patients with solid tumors in line with the indications for catheterization; PICC Intubation and maintenance in this hospital; Expected catheter indwelling time ≥8 weeks; Willing to cooperate with this study and sign an informed consent

Exclusion criteria

  • With Pregnant; with mental diseases who cannot cooperate; Incomplete clinical data; The catheter tip position is not in the best position or the catheter-to-venous ratio ≥45% (vascular diameter≤2.93 mm); Have thrombosis in 3 months before intubation; Be undergoing thrombolysis or anticoagulation therapy

Trial design

112 participants in 2 patient groups

With AT-Ⅲ, PC, PS activity decreased
Description:
Any decreased in AT-Ⅲ, PC, PS activity before catheter intubation is regarded as the exposure group
Treatment:
Diagnostic Test: Venous blood collecting and test and ultrasound screening
AT-Ⅲ, PC, PS activity are at normal value
Description:
The activities of AT-Ⅲ, PC and PS are all at normal values before catheter intubation
Treatment:
Diagnostic Test: Venous blood collecting and test and ultrasound screening

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Yun Shi, Bachelor

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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