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Evaluating prophylactic heparin in ambulatory patients with solid tumours: a systematic review and individual participant data meta-analysis

Evaluating prophylactic heparin in ambulatory patients with solid tumours: a systematic review and individual participant data meta-analysis
Evaluating prophylactic heparin in ambulatory patients with solid tumours: a systematic review and individual participant data meta-analysis
Background
Study-level meta-analyses provide high-certainty evidence that heparin reduces the risk of symptomatic venous thromboembolism for patients with cancer; however, whether the benefits and harms associated with heparin differ by cancer type is unclear. This individual participant data meta-analysis of randomised controlled trials examines the effect of heparin on survival, venous thromboembolism, and bleeding in patients with cancer in general and by type.

Methods
In this systematic review and meta-analysis we searched MEDLINE, Embase, and The Cochrane Library for randomised controlled trials comparing parenteral anticoagulants with placebo or standard care in ambulatory patients with solid tumours and no indication for anticoagulation published from the inception of each database to January 14, 2017, and updated it on May 14, 2020, without language restrictions. We calculated the effect of parenteral anticoagulant administration on all-cause mortality, venous thromboembolism occurrence, and bleeding related outcomes through multivariable hierarchical models with patient-level variables as fixed effects and a categorical trial variable as a random effect, adjusting for age, cancer type, and metastatic status. Interaction terms were tested to investigate effects in predefined subgroups. This study is registered with PROSPERO, CRD42013003526.

Findings
We obtained individual participant data from 14 of 20 eligible randomised controlled trials (8278 [79%] of 10 431 participants; 4139 included in the low-molecular-weight heparin group and 4139 in the control group). Meta- analysis showed an adjusted relative risk (RR) of mortality at 1 year of 0·99 (95% CI 0·93–1·06) and a hazard ratio of 1·01 (95% CI 0·96–1·07). The number of patients with venous thromboembolic events was 158 (4·0%) of 3958 with available data in the low-molecular-weight heparin group compared with 279 (7·1%) of 3957 in the control group. Major bleeding events occurred in 71 (1·7%) of 4139 patients in the control population and 88 (2·1%) in the low- molecular-weight heparin group, and minor bleeding events in 478 (12·1%) of 3945 patients with available data in the control group and 652 (16·6%) of 3937 patients in the low-molecular-weight heparin group. The adjusted RR was 0·58 (95% CI 0·47–0·71) for venous thromboembolism, 1·27 (0·92–1·74) for major bleeding, and 1·34 (1·19–1·51) for minor bleeding. Prespecified subgroup analysis of venous thromboembolism occurrence by cancer type identified the most certain benefit from heparin treatment in patients with lung cancer (RR 0·59 [95% CI 0·42–0·81]), which dominated the overall reduction in venous thromboembolism. Certainty of the evidence for the outcomes ranged from moderate to high.

Interpretation
Low-molecular-weight heparin reduces risk of venous thromboembolism without increasing risk of major bleeding compared with placebo or standard care in patients with solid tumours, but it does not improve survival.

Funding
Canadian Institutes of Health Research.
2352-3026
E746-E755
Schünemann, Holger J
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Ventresca, Matthew
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Crowther, Mark
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Zhou, Qi
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Macbeth, Fergus
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Noble, Simon
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Griffiths, Gareth
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Garcia, David
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Lyman, Gary H.
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DiNisio, Marcello
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Iorio, Alfonso
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Mbuagbaw, Lawrence
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Neumann, Ignacio
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Van Es, Nick
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Brouwers, Melissa
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Guyatt, Gordon
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Streiff, Michael B.
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Marcucci, Maura
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Baldeh, Tejan
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Florez, Ivan D.
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Solh, Ziad
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Bossuyt, Patrick M.
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Kahale, Lara A.
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Ageno, Walter
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Bozas, George
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Büller, Harry R.
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Lebeau, Bernard
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Lecumberri, Ramon
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Loprinzi, Charles
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McBane, Robert
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Sideras, Kostandinos
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Maraveyas, Anthony
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Pelzer, Uwe
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Perry, James
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Klerk, Clara
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Agnelli, Giancarlo
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Akl, Elie A.
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Schünemann, Holger J
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Ventresca, Matthew
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Crowther, Mark
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Briel, Matthias
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Zhou, Qi
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Macbeth, Fergus
e4ea3d86-4ce3-402f-bfbd-1bcb4bdfebb2
Noble, Simon
be42d512-f03e-41bc-a1ab-c12dbf249836
Griffiths, Gareth
7fd300c0-d279-4ff6-842d-aa1f2b9b864d
Garcia, David
453fb1b2-f557-45cc-8acb-894d0cde0220
Lyman, Gary H.
058876f9-d430-4b94-afa8-59a623501c5a
DiNisio, Marcello
a5ae8e1f-cee8-4237-aab1-d46cc7063dfe
Iorio, Alfonso
32c59f2e-f026-469e-bea2-4d44b35ae1bd
Mbuagbaw, Lawrence
e2c1c9b5-3feb-460c-a534-b6888c519ee2
Neumann, Ignacio
a85e3802-8408-485b-ab02-ca947c55e182
Van Es, Nick
9dd6b7d5-fb70-490e-89bd-1c7e7534a68e
Brouwers, Melissa
99813f8b-0f07-4ce9-8b60-30c96765b55b
Guyatt, Gordon
9441513c-987a-497c-8103-a70f3e1d623c
Streiff, Michael B.
d703346d-1f11-45f7-b270-902cb0c19e5c
Marcucci, Maura
fbaaa8b6-a349-4cbb-acd8-2a9088b4621a
Baldeh, Tejan
6e228a58-1a2d-4f77-8ea1-841e7ae787cf
Florez, Ivan D.
7dfed0ac-0c05-4c98-8406-ddc3d41fbdd5
Gurunlu Alma, Ozlem
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Solh, Ziad
b55cbd2b-cb1a-4c81-a47e-75555f27e451
Bossuyt, Patrick M.
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Kahale, Lara A.
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Ageno, Walter
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Bozas, George
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Büller, Harry R.
ed4e7332-82ba-433f-981b-0f601113d04c
Lebeau, Bernard
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Lecumberri, Ramon
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Loprinzi, Charles
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McBane, Robert
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Sideras, Kostandinos
1915ffd6-9bb2-4aed-9875-f409a0ec60aa
Maraveyas, Anthony
d3b63674-d174-461a-b4d3-c561f9666440
Pelzer, Uwe
d2a58911-7cc7-43e4-90de-99fe921f0fdb
Perry, James
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Klerk, Clara
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Agnelli, Giancarlo
4cc2d638-aa4b-4428-98f5-732daf1dbf66
Akl, Elie A.
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Schünemann, Holger J, Ventresca, Matthew, Crowther, Mark, Briel, Matthias, Zhou, Qi, Macbeth, Fergus, Noble, Simon, Griffiths, Gareth, Garcia, David, Lyman, Gary H., DiNisio, Marcello, Iorio, Alfonso, Mbuagbaw, Lawrence, Neumann, Ignacio, Van Es, Nick, Brouwers, Melissa, Guyatt, Gordon, Streiff, Michael B., Marcucci, Maura, Baldeh, Tejan, Florez, Ivan D., Gurunlu Alma, Ozlem, Solh, Ziad, Bossuyt, Patrick M., Kahale, Lara A., Ageno, Walter, Bozas, George, Büller, Harry R., Lebeau, Bernard, Lecumberri, Ramon, Loprinzi, Charles, McBane, Robert, Sideras, Kostandinos, Maraveyas, Anthony, Pelzer, Uwe, Perry, James, Klerk, Clara, Agnelli, Giancarlo and Akl, Elie A. (2020) Evaluating prophylactic heparin in ambulatory patients with solid tumours: a systematic review and individual participant data meta-analysis. The Lancet Haematology, 7 (10), E746-E755. (doi:10.1016/S2352-3026(20)30293-3).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background
Study-level meta-analyses provide high-certainty evidence that heparin reduces the risk of symptomatic venous thromboembolism for patients with cancer; however, whether the benefits and harms associated with heparin differ by cancer type is unclear. This individual participant data meta-analysis of randomised controlled trials examines the effect of heparin on survival, venous thromboembolism, and bleeding in patients with cancer in general and by type.

Methods
In this systematic review and meta-analysis we searched MEDLINE, Embase, and The Cochrane Library for randomised controlled trials comparing parenteral anticoagulants with placebo or standard care in ambulatory patients with solid tumours and no indication for anticoagulation published from the inception of each database to January 14, 2017, and updated it on May 14, 2020, without language restrictions. We calculated the effect of parenteral anticoagulant administration on all-cause mortality, venous thromboembolism occurrence, and bleeding related outcomes through multivariable hierarchical models with patient-level variables as fixed effects and a categorical trial variable as a random effect, adjusting for age, cancer type, and metastatic status. Interaction terms were tested to investigate effects in predefined subgroups. This study is registered with PROSPERO, CRD42013003526.

Findings
We obtained individual participant data from 14 of 20 eligible randomised controlled trials (8278 [79%] of 10 431 participants; 4139 included in the low-molecular-weight heparin group and 4139 in the control group). Meta- analysis showed an adjusted relative risk (RR) of mortality at 1 year of 0·99 (95% CI 0·93–1·06) and a hazard ratio of 1·01 (95% CI 0·96–1·07). The number of patients with venous thromboembolic events was 158 (4·0%) of 3958 with available data in the low-molecular-weight heparin group compared with 279 (7·1%) of 3957 in the control group. Major bleeding events occurred in 71 (1·7%) of 4139 patients in the control population and 88 (2·1%) in the low- molecular-weight heparin group, and minor bleeding events in 478 (12·1%) of 3945 patients with available data in the control group and 652 (16·6%) of 3937 patients in the low-molecular-weight heparin group. The adjusted RR was 0·58 (95% CI 0·47–0·71) for venous thromboembolism, 1·27 (0·92–1·74) for major bleeding, and 1·34 (1·19–1·51) for minor bleeding. Prespecified subgroup analysis of venous thromboembolism occurrence by cancer type identified the most certain benefit from heparin treatment in patients with lung cancer (RR 0·59 [95% CI 0·42–0·81]), which dominated the overall reduction in venous thromboembolism. Certainty of the evidence for the outcomes ranged from moderate to high.

Interpretation
Low-molecular-weight heparin reduces risk of venous thromboembolism without increasing risk of major bleeding compared with placebo or standard care in patients with solid tumours, but it does not improve survival.

Funding
Canadian Institutes of Health Research.

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Accepted/In Press date: 1 April 2020
e-pub ahead of print date: 22 September 2020
Published date: 1 October 2020

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 445064
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/445064
ISSN: 2352-3026
PURE UUID: 735a247d-caba-4185-95ea-1a4ddbc7dbc9
ORCID for Gareth Griffiths: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-9579-8021

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 18 Nov 2020 17:35
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 05:56

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Contributors

Author: Holger J Schünemann
Author: Matthew Ventresca
Author: Mark Crowther
Author: Matthias Briel
Author: Qi Zhou
Author: Fergus Macbeth
Author: Simon Noble
Author: David Garcia
Author: Gary H. Lyman
Author: Marcello DiNisio
Author: Alfonso Iorio
Author: Lawrence Mbuagbaw
Author: Ignacio Neumann
Author: Nick Van Es
Author: Melissa Brouwers
Author: Gordon Guyatt
Author: Michael B. Streiff
Author: Maura Marcucci
Author: Tejan Baldeh
Author: Ivan D. Florez
Author: Ozlem Gurunlu Alma
Author: Ziad Solh
Author: Patrick M. Bossuyt
Author: Lara A. Kahale
Author: Walter Ageno
Author: George Bozas
Author: Harry R. Büller
Author: Bernard Lebeau
Author: Ramon Lecumberri
Author: Charles Loprinzi
Author: Robert McBane
Author: Kostandinos Sideras
Author: Anthony Maraveyas
Author: Uwe Pelzer
Author: James Perry
Author: Clara Klerk
Author: Giancarlo Agnelli
Author: Elie A. Akl

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