Two Cases of Spontaneous Bleeding in Lung Transplant Recipients Treated with Systemic Anticoagulation for COVID-19

2021 
Introduction COVID-19 promotes inflammation and a hypercoagulable state. Antithrombotic therapies may be administered for thromboprophylaxis in those with severe infection requiring hospitalization. Spontaneous bleeding is an infrequent, yet life-threatening complication in patients receiving systemic anticoagulation. Case Report Two bilateral lung transplant recipients - 77-year-old female with idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (patient A) and 69-year-old male with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (patient B) - each presented with several days’ history of dyspnea, cough, and fatigue at 29-months and 11-months post-transplant, respectively; RT-PCR was positive for SARS-CoV-2 infection in both. Over the course of the next few days, patient A rapidly deteriorated with need for intubation despite initial treatment with antibiotics and corticotherapy. Patient B experienced gradual worsening of respiratory symptoms, which required high-flow oxygen supplementation and IV antibiotics. Inflammatory markers were elevated in both patients, and CT of the chest was consistent with atypical pneumonia in each. Patient A received convalescent plasma as a rescue therapy, and patient B received remdesivir with convalescent plasma. Given the hypercoagulable state in each, patient A and B received enoxaparin and IV heparin, respectively. Slowly, hemoglobin and platelet counts dropped in both patients, with need for transfusion and hemodynamic support. CT of the abdomen revealed a left gluteal intramuscular hematoma in patient A; CT of the chest, abdomen, and pelvis revealed a spontaneous chest wall hematoma and small area of retroperitoneal bleeding in patient B (Figure 1A and B). Summary These cases raise awareness for the viral-induced hypercoagulable state observed during the disease course. Clinicians should be cautious to avoid any hemorrhagic complications associated with thromboprophylaxis in selected cases, particularly in at-risk immunosuppressed patients.
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