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Monitoring
Patients with acute pulmonary embolism have a high
frequency (20-50%) of symptomatic extension of thrombus and/or recurrent venous
thromboembolism and therefore require long-term anticoagulant treatment. Treatment
with oral anticoagulant is the preferred method of long-term management of most
pulmonary embolism patients. Adjusted doses of UFH or LMWH may be indicated for
selected patients in whom oral anticoagulants are contraindicated or
impractical.
Low-Molecular-Weight Heparin (LMWH)
LMWHs are the preferred drug for patients with
pulmonary embolism and cancer. It should be used for the first 3-6 months of
long-term anticoagulant therapy, then continued as oral therapy indefinitely or
until the cancer has resolved.
Oral Anticoagulant
The duration of anticoagulation is dependent on the
type of event and the coexistence of prolonged risk factors which are as
follows:
- Pulmonary embolism due to transient or reversible risk factor: Oral anticoagulation is recommended for at least 3 months
- Unprovoked pulmonary embolism: Oral anticoagulation is recommended for at least 3 months
- Unprovoked pulmonary embolism (first episode), with low-risk of bleeding and in whom stable anticoagulation can be achieved: Consider long-term oral anticoagulation
- Unprovoked pulmonary embolism (second episode): Long-term treatment is recommended
Risk Factors for Major Bleeding
During Anticoagulation
The following are the risk factors for major bleeding during
anticoagulation:
- Age >75 years
- Previous gastrointestinal bleeding
- Previous noncardioembolic stroke
- Chronic hepatic and renal disease
- Concomitant antiplatelet therapy
- Poor anticoagulant control
- Suboptimal monitoring of therapy
- Comorbid illness
Monitoring During
Anticoagulation
INR should be checked at least weekly during the first several weeks of
Warfarin therapy. If stable, monitor every 2 weeks then every 4 weeks, but not
>4 weeks. The target INR is 2.5 for most patients and 3.0 for patients with
recurrent venous thromboembolism.